INTERVIEW: DeLaurentis

INTERVIEW:

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 PHOTO CREDIT: Dominique Gau 

DeLaurentis

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THERE is a distinct magic that emanates…

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from the sounds of DeLaurentis. I have been speaking with the songwriter about her Big Part of a Big Sun E.P. and what inspired its songs. She talks about her connection to music and literature; why she takes care of producing her own music; how computer music changed her life and creativity – she talks about the three albums that mean the most to her.

I ask her to recommend some new artists and what tour dates are coming up; which musicians she grew up around; if she has a special memory that sticks in the mind; what she hopes to achieve before the end of the year – DeLaurentis tells me how she chills away from music.

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Hi, DeLaurentis. How are you? How has your week been?

Hi. I’m fine! We had a beautiful week in Paris - the summer weather came early. I performed a live video with my violinist friend at my home studio; we played the single from my new E.P.

For those new to your music; can you introduce yourself, please?

I’m a singer-musician and I produce everything. I record with synthesizers, controllers; loppers, vocoders etc. My music is Electronic, Pop and cinematic. I’m fascinated by the relationship between sounds and images! I grew up in an artistic family. My father is a Jazz piano player, my sister is an actress and my little brothers are musicians, too.

Big Part of a Big Sun is your new E.P. Can you tell me what sort of themes influenced the songs that appear throughout?

I composed these new songs on an island while trying to disconnect myself from city life and the crazy rhythm of the digital world. That’s why elements of nature, dreams; memories and the cycle of life are the themes of this new E.P.

Is it true you wrote the songs whilst on an island – free from distractions of social media? Did that influence themes of connecting with nature and the planet?

Yes, it’s true! Last year, I felt in a state of emergency to be in the wild and let intuition and inspiration take the reins. So, I went to an island to create and the result was immediate - because the first song I wrote was A Big Part of a Big Sun! It is an ode to the majestic sun - and the other songs came naturally after…

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How much do literature and art go into your music? Do you take a lot from literature when you conceive material?

I like to read Celtic tales and traditional myths to write songs because it helps to open ‘the doors of perception’, as William Blake stated. My favourite books are Femmes qui courent avec les loups by Clarissa Pinkola Esté and La Femme Celte by Jean Markale.

Did music suddenly mean more to you when you discovered computer music? Was that a moment when you stepped up your ambitions and aims?!

At the age of twenty-four, I discovered computer music and I understood that all the sounds and melodies in my head could be recorded and played. Infinite possibilities were opened to me!

We live in a revolutionary time: nowadays: everyone can make music at home and release it online very easily.

You are a producer, too. Do you think having control of your music makes it sounds more natural and personal?

Yes. it’s really great to feel independent and free to make music by myself. It’s more personal and singular because I can choose the sounds, the effects; the sound design, the scenario…and, sometimes, accidents and mistakes can become a personal touch!

Which musicians struck your ear when you were growing up?

The first record I listened to, when I was five, was Toulouse from Claude Nougaro, a famous singer from my own city! Afterwards, I heard my father playing Jazz standards in clubs and I used to sing Jazz a lot. In my teenage years, I discovered Trip-Hop with Portishead, Morcheeba; Björk, Massive Attack…it was a defining moment!

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PHOTO CREDIT: Thomas Guerigen

Do you have any gigs lined up? Where are you heading?

Not in the U.K. at the moment, but I have few gigs coming in France in the next months. One of them is a residence in the Montargis theatre (a small city close to Paris), where I will rehearse my new live show. At the end of the residence, I will perform my show and host a masterclass about how I connect Ableton software and Resolume software (video) on stage.

What do you hope to achieve in 2018?

I hope to perform in many places in many other countries! I would love to come to play in London, of course! I really enjoyed performing in Ecuador last January year and I would love to return to South America. I’m also working on new songs and I hope to release my first album next year.

Have you got a favourite memory from your time in music – the one that sticks in the mind?

One of my best memories as an artist is the concert I gave in 2016 with a string Classical quartet. The meeting of electronic and organic sounds is a perfect mixture. Since then, I always try to put these ingredients in my new songs!

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If you could select the three albums that mean the most to you; which would they be and why?

Laurie Anderson - Big Science

She’s one of the first women who pioneered Electronic music - and this album is a huge reference for me.

Björk - Homogenic

After the queen Laurie Anderson, there is the diva Björk; another amazing female artist who has made a mark on the music history. This album is absolute perfection.

Joni Mitchell - Both Sides Now

Because it’s beautiful, poetic; symphonic and tender. It’s her seventeenth album and, for me, it’s her best! It always reminds me that I still have a lot to do and a lot to learn!

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What advice would you give to new artists coming through?

Be true; listen to your intuition and use the music to make a link between body and spirit. Share your feelings, give your emotions and the most important thing is working hard every day. Sacha Guitry (the famous French actor, director and screenwriter) used to say that an artist is 10% luck, 10% talent and 80% hard-working!

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IN THIS PHOTO: Prequell/PHOTO CREDIT: Barrere & Simon

Are there any new artists you recommend we check out?

Yes. I recommend you a lot of new artists like Prequell, LAAKE; Oscar and the Wolf, Malvina Meinier; Grandbrothers, Penelope Antena and Superpoze.

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 IN THIS PHOTO: Malvina Meiner/PHOTO CREDIT: Lucas Lauren

Do you get much time to chill away from music? How do you unwind?

I do yoga every morning! I can’t begin a day without sun salutation. I like to walk in a park, have a glass of red wine with my friends and I enjoy cooking exotic meals like chicken curry, couscous and tom yam soup. Watching (T.V.) series is a good way to chill away from music. I prefer Science Fiction and Fantasy like Black Mirror, Stranger Things and Game of Thrones.

Finally, and for being a good sport; you can choose a song and I’ll play it here (not any of your music - I will do that).

The Singer by Teitur

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INTERVIEW: Crossing the Limits

INTERVIEW:

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Crossing the Limits

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ONE cannot listen to a Crossing the Limits song…

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without being impacted and moved. I have been speaking with the five-piece Pop-Punk band about their latest cut, Predictable, and how they all got together – I learn more about their current E.P., Perseverance, and whether more material is in their mind already.

The stunning band (their vocalist, Rachael, fields the questions) discuss tour dates and what advice they’d give to fellow songwriters emerging; if they all get much time to detach and chill away from music; which new artist we should get behind; the sort of artists who inspire Crossing the Limits – what ambitions are left to tick off for the awesome quintet.

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Hi, guys. How are you? How has your week been?

Hey! Pretty good, thanks. We had a pretty busy week last week with heading to Leeds and our first headline show in Norwich.

For those new to your music; can you introduce yourselves, please?

Yeah! We are a five-piece Pop-Punk band. Our music is pretty bright, edgy and fun.

How did Crossing the Limits get together? When did the band start?

We started up in 2016 - but the line-up wasn’t really final until around early-2017. I was looking to start up a new band after my last one had called it a day. I started posting ads online and all around town in a desperate bid to find the right people. I was looking for people with ambition, drive (and that) shared the same dream.

Things were not easy: it took a while, but everyone in this band is in it for a solid reason..and I wouldn’t change a single one. They’re like my brothers.

 

Talk to me about the song, Predictable. What is the story behind it?

The song is really standing for being who you are without apology.

Like; how many times do we all start to question ourselves because we're not doing the same as everybody else?! We doubt ourselves so much for simply being different. I got really fed up with seeing my friends and people around me throwing away what they actually wanted to do because it wasn’t realistic, or people had told them it was too difficult.

I've felt like that, so many times, where I've been made to feel like what I wanted out of life was stupid because it doesn’t fit in with what everybody else is doing. I want people to listen to this song and brush off anyone that’s tried to put down their ambitions.

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How much of what you are writing at the moment is based on your experiences over the past few years – lives in different bands and areas of the country?

All of it! I'll never write about something that I haven’t gone through. These songs are all stories that have happened over the last year. It’s really cool to listen back and go back to that place in time.

Your debut E.P., Perseverance, was out a few weeks back. What has the reaction been like so far?

Amazing! We are so pleased we’ve sent C.D.s out to people in America and Germany. It’s so cool to see that our music is reaching people in those places. Our fans seem to be enjoying it - and that’s what matters most to us.

Are you already looking ahead to new material? Are you always writing?

Absolutely! We've been writing a bunch of new songs. We like to give ourselves time and come up with the best possible songs we can before making any final choices on which ones go on the next record.

You gotta let life happen for the inspiration to come in.

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What sort of music did you all grow up around?

I grew up with a lot of Pop music, then I discovered Pop-Punk and it really filled in that edge I'd never really got from just straight Pop music. The guys grew up with a ton of Pop-Punk and Rock music. Avril Lavigne was always a big go-to for me.

Do you have any gigs lined up? Where are you heading?

We’re looking into booking some shows for summer, so look out for those. We just need to be on the right line-up and hitting the right places.

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What do you hope to achieve in 2018?

Lots of shows and to grow our fan base is the goal for this year.

Have you each got a favourite memory from your time in music – the one that sticks in the mind?

I think collectively, as a band, we'd say opening for Against the Current in our hometown was a huge night for us. We gained so many new fans that night and had such a great time. I was always a big fan of the band We Are the In Crowd and, now Jordan Eckes has moved to playing for A.T.C. live, it was pretty damn cool to be playing alongside someone I've got a lot of respect for.

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If you could support any musician alive today, and choose your own rider, what would that entail?

I'm really loving Halsey right now. I really like her vibe and I also really like how she stands for the L.G.B.T.Q. community which, as someone who is gay myself, I really respect that. She played a show in Russia and, even at risk of getting thrown in jail, still gave a shout-out to the people in the crowd holding up flags - saying she was proud of them for being brave. I thought that was bad-ass. Pvris would also be really cool to open for!

I don’t think we'd have anything too crazy: we keep talking about how we want a band dog so, probably, dogs and junk food.

What advice would you give to new artists coming through?

Stay true to your art. There’s gonna be a lot of people with a lot of different opinions. You can’t get too involved in any of that because, then, you start writing to please a million different people. Believe in what you're doing wholeheartedly and protect it.

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IN THIS PHOTO: Pessimist.

Are there any new artists you recommend we check out?

A Pop-Punk band called Pessimist. They’re fairly local to us - and one of my favourite bands right now.

Do you get much time to chill away from music? How do you unwind?

I actually do find it really hard sometimes to find a balance, because music is something I live for so, when I get a minute, I'm usually thinking what needs to get done next for the band. I feel kinda guilty if I'm not being productive. When I do tell myself to step away, I like to hang with friends and family or watch weird documentaries on YouTube.

Finally, and for being good sports; you can each choose a song and I’ll play it here (not any of your music - I will do that).

Rach: All You Are Is History - State Champs

Tom: Audit in ProgressHot Snakes

Ben: On My Teeth - Underoath

Tim: Young Blood - Good Friend

Dan: Taking OffONE OK ROCK

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INTERVIEW: Too Many Zooz

INTERVIEW:

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Too Many Zooz

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MY first encounter with Too Many Zooz

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was through YouTube videos of them playing to eager and excited commuters. The Brass-House trio grabbed worldwide attention with their thrilling performances in New York’s Subway. I have been speaking with Leo about the band's YouTube videos and what the story of their single, Bedford, is.

He talks to me about upcoming gigs and what it was like working with Beyoncé; whether we will see more material later in the year; what the music vibe is like in New York – Leo tells me who he, and the band, count as influences.

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Hi, guys. How are you? How has your week been?

This is Leo speaking! We are good; back on tour and feels better than ever. When I play by myself, I can never seem to get to the level of passion and enjoyment that I reach playing in front of people, so I’m very happy to be back on tour.

For those new to your music; can you introduce yourselves, please?

We are Too Many Zooz; a Brass-House trio that started in the subways of N.Y.C. Brass-House is the sound of a D.J. mixed with the improvisational, conversational attitude of a Jazz trio.

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PHOTO CREDIT: Mathieu Foucher

I first came across Too Many Zooz watching YouTube videos playing on the New York City Subway. Do you remember the first time you played there? How did you all get together?

I (Leo) met the King of Sludge playing in a Subway band called the Drumadics. One day, he told everybody in the band he wanted to play more - and that anyone can show up tomorrow morning if they want to play. I was the only person that showed. At first, it was the King of Sludge, myself and his son. We played for several months and then his son went back to school in Portland. 

One day, my good school buddy at Manhattan School of Music was just hanging out at my place and I was like: “Hey; wanna come jam with us?!” The rest is history. The first time we played it felt right, so we never stopped.  

Were you quite surprised the reaction you got and the number of people who watched videos of your Subway gigs?

Honestly, I wasn’t, but I’m probably the only person that wasn’t surprised. I knew it was special and that people would eventually enjoy our charisma all over the world. However; I did not know it would happen this fast…

Bedford is your latest track. Can you reveal how that came together and what inspired it?

Bedford is a classic ‘Brass-House piece’; I believe it’s volume 78 part 2 - meaning the song was actually made up on the spot to reflect the situation we were in. If we played a fully written-out piece, it wouldn’t have had the same chemistry. We were inspired by the L train; a train that became very important to all of us over the years.

Might we see an album or E.P. coming later this year?

Hopefully, but probably not. We have a single label deal currently, which means we can’t just release stuff whenever we want. But, we have tons of new music and I hope it will be released soon - at the very least, we will definitely be releasing singles throughout this year.

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PHOTO CREDIT: Mathieu Foucher

I know you have collaborated with Beyoncé! What was that experience like?!

It was amazing and very professional. She was very kind and the whole experience was just great. There are no words to describe the feeling we had, honestly.

I am interesting finding out who you count as influences. Which artists have inspired you all?

Kanye West, Miles Davis; Diplo, Prince, Ronnie Cuber; Sean Jones, Lenny Picket; Vibes Cartel, Tupac; Migos, Michael Jackson; Beyoncé, Justin Bieber etc.

What is the music scene like in New York? Is it a wonderful place to create and play?

The music scene in New York is great, but it takes a while to get enough work to support yourself. You really have to be a good individual who is talented and driven. As long as you keep your manners and work ethic up, you will succeed and have fun.

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Do you have any gigs lined up? Where are you heading?

Currently, on a European tour until the end of May…

What do you hope to achieve in 2018?

World Domination…duh!

Have you each got a favourite memory from your time in music – the one that sticks in the mind?

Beyoncé!

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PHOTO CREDIT: Brandon Nagy

If you could support any musician alive today, and choose your own rider, what would that entail?

The Wu-Tang Clan - Water, Hennessy; local food...and something else that I’d rather not mention…

What advice would you give to new artists coming through?

Find something you are good at it and become great at it. If you are the best at what you do, your chance of success is heightened to an extreme level.

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Are there any new artists you recommend we check out?

Five Alarm Funk.

Do you get much time to chill away from music? How do you unwind?

Honestly; we all unwind by making our own music and spending time with friends and family. I, personally, really enjoy going to the gym with my brother.

Finally, and for being a good sport; you can choose a song and I’ll play it here (not any of your music - I will do that).

Prince - Purple Rain

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INTERVIEW: Lostchild

INTERVIEW:

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 Lostchild

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THERE are few out there like Lostchild

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I have been speaking with the unique artist about his track, Blacklist, and creating its extraordinary video. The young songwriter tells me how it feels knowing his E.P., Blacklist, has gathered big reviews; what his next steps are in terms of material and touring; what music means to him – he reveals the three albums that mean the most to him.

Lostchild tells me his ambitions for the rest of the year; why he takes influences from the '80s and '90s; which new artist we should check out; the advice he would give to fellow artists coming through – he ends the interview by selecting a very fine song.

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Hi, Lostchild. How are you? How has your week been?

Me and my week have been pretty good. A little hungover today...

For those new to your music; can you introduce yourself, please?

I’m Lostchild. I grew up in a small town but finally moved to London; I write Electronic-Pop music songs about being an anxiety-ridden queer person. I love a big pop hook and the '80s.

What can you tell us about the new single, Blacklist? What inspired its creation?

Blacklist is about changing yourself to keep someone else interested. It’s about a particular relationship I had with a guy who was clearly uninterested, but I perceived him as so out of my league that I jumped through hoops to meet up with him.

I like the video a lot. Was it quite a good experience shooting it? Do you enjoy music videos?

I actually am more of a T.V. buff: I don’t watch a lot of music videos, so the ideas I have for videos are often influenced by things I’ve seen in T.V. shows. I like to tell a story. The Blacklist video was a magnificent experience; it was my first time and, hopefully not the last time, working with Gary Woods (@garyxwoods) - a really provocative director from Manchester.

He filmed me getting drunk in a hotel room; trying on all this beautiful fetish wear designed by The Freak Show (@thefreakshowuk). The end result is exactly what I wanted: a hazy memory of a hedonistic night. It’s way out of my comfort zone and I’m sure it will divide viewers, but it was so liberating.

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Your E.P., Blacklist, has gathered great reviews. What themes and experiences compelled the music? How much of you is in the songs?

The E.P. is very much about how anxiety has affected my behaviour patterns…drink and drugs leading to casual sex and bad behaviour and the shame and regret that comes afterwards. Which, in itself, leads back to drink and drugs to cope. All of the songs are about vicious cycles that I know a lot of queer people go through to cope with their mental-health.

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It seems like you have a love of '80s and '90s Pop. Which artists do you count as idols? Did music come into your life early?

The earliest musical obsessions I remember having was the Spice Girls and B*Witched, but my first love was Madonna. I was ten and I listened to my mum’s copy of her Ray of Light album. I’m not sure what drew me to her, but I became obsessed and would make my mum go into C.D. shops to buy her albums for me because I was too embarrassed. What I heard and saw of Madonna was a truly rebellious soul, something I always wished I could be, and I feel like she has inspired me to be unapologetically yourself, even if it ruffles some feathers.

There was a lot of other '80s and '90s artists such as Sade and George Michael, that my parents listened to a lot, which probably explains my affinity for ‘80s and ‘90s music as well.

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What, to you, does music do? Is it a way of translating and expressing yourself in a unique and easy way?

Making music is a way for me to make sense of all the negative things in my life. If I didn’t make music, all the horrible things I feel, the stupid things I’ve done; they would just define me. Instead, I try to own my pain and mistakes, be honest about it all, and, hopefully, reach other people who feel like outsiders - and who frequently self-sabotage and doubt themselves.

Do you feel you’re a more confident and inventive artist since your earliest days?

More confident, certainly. More inventive…I dunno.

I made some pretty out-there music before settling on Pop. Making music people actually want to listen to in order for them to hear your message definitely requires you to be more business-savvy in your approach. So, I would say I make more accessible music than I used to but, luckily, I love a Pop hook; so, I’m simply getting better at making pop music and that makes me confident.

Do you have any gigs lined up? Where are you heading?

There are some gigs in the works for summer, but you’ll have to follow my socials (@lostchilduk) for announcements!

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What do you hope to achieve in 2018?

I want to get out there and gig, meet people who recognise themselves in my music - and become a voice for the messed-up queer community!

Have you got a favourite memory from your time in music – the one that sticks in the mind?

Being on stage for the first time. Absolutely electrifying. The only time that my anxiety isn’t niggling at me is when I’m on stage performing. When I left the stage for the first time, I thought: ‘This is what I’m on this earth to do’.

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If you could select the three albums that mean the most to you; which would they be and why?

Madonna - The Immaculate Collection

For being the (most) perfect collection of Pop songs ever…and Ray of Light for being the first album that made me realise I loved music.

Radiohead - Kid A

A bit out-there, I know, but this album is perfect for locking yourself away to and pretending the outside world doesn’t exist.

What advice would you give to new artists coming through?

Work hard. Make music and videos often; don’t treat it like a hobby. Keep yourself busy and people take you seriously.

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IN THIS PHOTO: Diamantina/PHOTO CREDIT: @kirangidda

Are there any new artists you recommend we check out?

Diamantina. I worked with her a while back and she’s just the most inspiring and positive person you’ve ever met. Her singles, 90s Kid, Earn Me and, especially, her new single, Bandwagon, are all soulful, sassy Pop gems. Girl knows how to write a hook...

Do you get much time to chill away from music? How do you unwind?

I binge-watch T.V. shows. I love a mix of stuff from The X-Files to Bob’s Burgers to Scandal.

Finally, and for being a good sport; you can choose a song and I’ll play it here (not any of your music - I will do that).

Satin Jackets (ft. Scavenger Hunt) - Feel Good

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INTERVIEW: Omer Matz

INTERVIEW:

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 Omer Matz

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WHEN thinking of all the parts of the world…

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I have taken this blog; it has been a while since I last visited Israel. Omer Matz gives me a chance to return to Tel Aviv and ask what the music scene is like there. The songwriter talks about his single, Hold, and what comes next for him; how he got into music; the artists who have inspired him – Matz discusses a business venture he set up for hobbyists.

I learn why the artist moved and relocated a few times; whether he took any skills from his business days to the music side of things; how he detaches away from music; whether there are any new artists to look out – I ask Matz whether he is coming to the U.K. and playing anytime soon.

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Hi, Omer. How are you? How has your week been?

Pretty good. New beginnings are always exciting: mainly learning a lot about music promotion these days.

For those new to your music; can you introduce yourself, please?

I’m thirty-two-years-old; I’ve lived in various places throughout my life (the U.S., Italy; London, Tel Aviv). I played Classical piano all of my childhood, started writing songs and playing the guitar at sixteen. At the age of twenty-two, I studied music at Goldsmiths College in London. During that period, one of my tutors spoke a lot about music for films, which I really fell in love with. London was a lot to take in at such an early stage of my music career (and of my personal career). Also, as a kid growing up near the beaches of sunny Tel Aviv, I really missed the weather, the people and felt it might be too early for me. I discovered that in my hometown, in one of the biggest music colleges in the country, they have a major in music for film.

So; I moved back home and began studying there. I wrote a few compositions for local film students but felt there was also another side of me that I needed to explore that’s not a musical side. So, I opened a business for music hobbyists that want to play in bands and gave them band lessons. The business grew fairly and, after three years, I decided to sell my part to my partner and continue exploring entrepreneurship through international startups. I got an offer to be the head of digital marketing for a start-up that was rapidly growing. Being the first employee, I was blinded by the excitement of creating something big from scratch, but it came with a price. After over a decade of having music a big part of my life, for the first time; I wasn’t doing anything connected to music for two years.

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I began also exploring my hippy side at that time and remember having this awakening in the middle of an extensive meditation session. (Heads up, this is a weird story…). My hands and fingers locked up, I couldn’t move them and I saw a strong vision of a woman and we started having this internal dreamy dialogue (no drugs were involved, I swear) and she kept telling me I need to trust her. Diving deeper into this bizarre and very intense experience; I understood that this subconscious conversation was reality and my intuition slapping me in the face trying to wake me up. From there, something opened up. I began writing songs like never before. I finally felt the songs were mature enough and ready enough to see light.

I decided to quit my job and start building myself again as a musician, this time, as a songwriter - the raw and pure way it appeared in my life at age sixteen.

Hold is your new track. What is the background to the song?

After leaving my business, while working in the start-up company, we moved offices to a building with shared office space. To my surprise, one of the companies sitting in that space was the music company I have founded and separated from. Going back home that day, I realized I didn’t move on and didn’t forgive myself for giving up this beautiful creation. The song is about holding on to something that’s not there anymore. I think anyone who experienced some sort of separation from something they loved dearly can connect with the feeling.

The lyrics in of the chorus are: “And so you hold, hold till it’s cold/Till the pieces fall apart/Hold with your soul, hold till it’s cold/Someday, it all adds up together”.

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It is a busy and alive song. Was it quite easy putting it together in the studio – or were there challenges and hurdles along the way?

Thanks (smiles). I’m really happy you feel that way.

I owe a lot to my producers Dotan Moshanov and Shimon Tal. They treated this song with extreme sensitivity and patience. Since this was the first song, it was also the first step into the E.P. and definitely a style-setter. The decision we made, in terms of style, had to be precise in terms of defining who I am as an artist. Strategically; this song’s purpose in the E.P. was to explore and set the tone for the other songs. It took nearly six months to build - but completely worth it.

I believe you are working on an E.P. Can you reveal some of the ideas and stories you will include?

Each song in this E.P. is a piece in the journey of deciding to become an artist. Some speak about the journey itself and some are about struggles along the way; betrayals, acceptance; fear, learning to let go of things that are stopping me from becoming something I’m so afraid of. Also; the sound and the general music production aim to give a feeling of something cinematic and scenic. I really want people to be able to visualize the stories in the songs.

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Tel Aviv is your home. What is the music scene like there right now? How much do you take from the people and fellow musicians?

Tel Aviv has an amazing music scene: very eclectic, so many different genres and sub-genres that are born because there’s such an interesting mixture of family backgrounds. You can find here any genre you can think of (Afrobeat, Arabic music; Yemen Blues, Greek music; Electro-pop, Jazz and so much more). Musicians here are so talented, which might also be one reason I was afraid to go in this path for so long.

But, yes; there’s so much to take from the scene over here.

You have moved around a bit and spent time in the U.S. and U.K. You transitioned from study to set up your own business. Tell me about that venture you set up for hobbyists…

After being a private piano tutor and as a child growing up playing the piano, who didn’t learn in any formal school, I came to music college clueless. I knew how to play Chopin and Debussy, but when I had to play with a band, it was a completely different thing. I remember getting a chord chart in my audition that I could read but when the bass, drums and guitar started playing, I had no freakin’ idea what to do. So, I thought to myself: there are so many music students who learn with a private tutor, they probably don’t play in bands - which is such a huge part of your education as a musician.

So, I started off by collaborating with many music tutors who give private lessons and giving their students a platform to also have band practice. I took a player from each instrument until a band was formed and gave them two-three-hour band lessons playing Rock, Pop; Jazz…anything. I worked with a small group of professional musicians who gave the band lessons and, every three months, we would organize bandathons.

The business grew till there were about thirty bands; 80% of them were adults, to my surprise. So many different types of people: a sixty-five-year-old grandma playing the bass; a commercial pilot, a British nurse; an endless variety of people brought together by music and the desire of playing in a band. It was great fun.

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How much did you learn from the business and taking care of musicians? Do you think modern artists have a lot to handle in terms of finance and promotion?

I’m still terrible with money - but it was obviously better than any business school out there. I think, today, musicians are very much similar to a business. I find a lot of musicians who are afraid to take care of the financial side and promotion side - but, it’s the most important thing you have after the music itself, of course. Nobody cares about your music as much as you do - and that passion is an engine. Even if you don’t ‘know’ how to promote, you have to be a part of it, somehow, and embrace it.  

Do you have any gigs lined up? Where are you heading?

At the moment, no.

I’m working on building up awareness, slowly, by releasing song-by-song. The plan is to release the E.P. around September and then start gigging. I’m heading anywhere.

Will we see you come over to the U.K.? Do you play here a lot?

I wish! I have played a bit with a band in London when I lived there ten years ago. Very much hoping to be back there.

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What do you hope to achieve in 2018?

Recognition as a musician; connection with new people through music; building a lifestyle that will allow myself to make music.

Music, to everyone, has different meanings. What does it mean to you? How important is it in your life?

Well….

Music, for me, is the most honest place there is. It comes from a feeling that needs to be expressed. It’s usually a dominant feeling; so, if I’m struggling with something, I might try to solve it through a song. It’s a place of healing and problem-solving. In my life experience, when music wasn’t in my life, I felt lost. It’s a sense of purpose.

Have you got a favourite memory from your time in music – the one that sticks in the mind?

Wow; so many…

If I have to choose one, it’s when we finished the mastering of Hold. I had some friends come over for drinks and, as the evening went on, they asked to hear the song. Most of my closest friends didn’t even know I was in a studio twice a week producing the E.P. (that’s how exaggeratedly-scared I was). Only two or three people heard the song before but I was drunk enough to go with the flow.

I played the song (on speakers. God forbid, not live) and they were so excited they couldn’t shut up for, literally, more than five seconds. I don’t even know if they listened to the song but they wanted to hear it again and again (worth mentioning: my friends are terrible when it comes to being politically correct). To feel their excitement was so rewarding - it gave such a boost of confidence.

What advice would you give to new artists coming through?

Patience. There is a tremendous amount of stuff to deal with and manage: you don’t have to deal with everything at once. 

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Are there any new artists you recommend we check out?

Yes. Two from the local music scene here in Israel: Full Trunk and ISADORA.

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PHOTO CREDITMerav Ben Loulou

Do you get much time to chill away from music? How do you unwind?

A good few days’ hike or a surf trip somewhere (which I don’t do enough).

Finally, and for being a good sport; you can choose a song and I’ll play it here (not any of your music - I will do that).

Ásgeir - Afterglow

Such a beautiful song. A great example of the magic that happens when a beautiful song meets beautiful production. Thank you so much for this interview!

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INTERVIEW: Tomorrows Bad Seeds

INTERVIEW:

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 Tomorrows Bad Seeds

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IT is a hectic and packed time for…

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the guys of Tomorrows Bad Seeds. I have been chatting with them about their singles, Frequency and Trinity – both of which have videos out. The songs are taken from the album, Illuminate – the band tells me about its creation and themes.

I ask Tomorrows Bad Seeds about their formation and what it is like living in the South Bay area of Los Angeles; if they have any gigs coming up; what sort of music the band are influenced by; whether we can see them come play over in the U.K. – they recommend some new artists we should be checking out.

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Hi, guys. How are you? How have your weeks been?

We are doing great! This week has been wicked. We just flew back home from Charlotte, North Carolina playing at the Jamaican Me Hoppy Festival, which was an absolute blast - seeing all of the unity and diversity amongst the town. 

For those new to your music; can you introduce yourselves, please?

Moi - Frontman/Vox

Mets - Guitar/Vox

Pat - Drums 

Dre - Bass man 

Steve - Keys/Organ/Synth

The videos for Frequency and Trinity are out. What was it like filming and creating those videos?

Frequency was captured by our boy Chris (concrete) while we were writing and recording the track with our good friend, Jason J. It felt really organic and true to the vibe of the song, which was written and recorded in a matter of hours from start to finish. The session went really well, so we decided to use the footage for a video. We hope you enjoy it.

Trinity was an impromptu video done by Tom from Reel Wolf out of Canada. He was gonna be in L.A. and our boy James Wright suggested we try a video with Tom, and we chose to film at locations that have had a large impact in our lives growing up with one foot on the beach and the other in the streets; encompassing the humble beginnings as a reminder to never forget where you came from. Also, to remember (to) never lose track of where you’re going: we all buy the ticket and take the ride.

What was the reason for releasing those two songs as singles? Do they hold a special place for you?

The reason we chose to release those songs first is because of how quick the songs came to fruition from start to finish; so, it made sense for us to share them first and, of course, isn’t the deep underlying message for all of humanity, to share love where it is so badly needed all over the world? The same goals we all strive for here in the concrete jungles: giving respect to all positive ideas and living things alike. 

All of the songs off of our upcoming record, Illuminate, hold a special place to us, as we are excited to release new music and have been for a while.  

Illuminate is the album they are taken from. Are there key themes and common links that go into the music? How would you define the record?

Yes. There are some key themes and common links on this record that encompass life from beginning to end; into the illumination of its resurrection and the cycle of birth to death. We would define this record as grown Folk music, with a feel-good positive vibe and attitude but, also, touching on the realities of life - “Life is the Mission/Love is the Message” M. McEwan.

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What was it like recording the album? Was it a lot of fun?

It’s always a lot of fun recording music and coming up with different ideas when one idea bounces off one another. It’s hard to expect when the magic hits, but it always does when you keep an open mind. It such a pleasure and privilege getting to work with the producer Chaz ‘ROX’ Toney out of the Island Empire Recording Studios in Carson, California. He is such a talented and hard-working producer/musician. It was many long days and even longer nights burning that midnight oil to its fullest.

We would spend long days and countless hours into the early morning working on and recording this record. It was so much fun and gave so much motivation getting to work with like-minded people we admire and respect so much.

How did Tomorrows Bad Seeds get together? How did you find one another?

Long story short; we (Mets and Moi) met in the summer of 2000 through a mutual friend. We started jamming music right on the beach break-wall where we met nearly every day, covering songs that heavily influenced us - from artists like Bob Marley, Sublime; Steel Pulse, Slightly Stoopid; the Eagles and many, many more. We would also jam in Moi’s mom’s living-room a lot, where she would give us so much love; amazing home Mexican food and constructive criticisms - and shared her theories of music with us that we still hold dear to this day. 

Later that year, we had the idea of starting a band…

Tomorrows Bad Seeds is Moises Juarez on vocals, Matthew McEwan on guitar and vocals; Johnny McEwan on drums and Al Arnado on the bass. This was the original line-up, until a year later Sean Chapman join the band playing guitar and vocals. This one ensemble lasted till about 2007 when Andre Davis joined playing the bass later on that year; Patrick Salmon joined playing the drums. That was our line-up up until Steve Aguilar started playing shows with us in 2010...

2015 is when Sean Chapman left the band and now, since, we have various people performing for us from Jeff Nisen on guitar; Steven Ingraham jammed a few shows with us and now we have Anthony Francisco on tour with us. Also, there’s Kurtis Parsons on percussion and we are looking forward to playing with many more musicians.

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You hail from South Bay, Los Angeles. What is the area like for music and likeminded artists?

The South Bay of Los Angeles is a very beautiful (although it looks like the balls of California on a map, maybe. Ha) area with open coasts and beautiful beaches with good waves; nice weather and beautiful people. With a melting pot of all different kinds of music ranging from Punk-Rock, Hip-Hop; Reggae, Jazz Blues etc…there’s lots of emerging talent coming out of the South Bay. We feel blessed to represent such a beautiful place, from which we got our start.

Aside from a few backyard parties, we played for a few good friends’ birthdays (one of which, Opie Ortiz from LBDA, was at pouring his homemade Martini concoctions down our throats as we were playing - some of our greatest memories were from the beginning when it all started.) 

Hermosa Beach Pier was our first show at the Lighthouse, opening up for Too Rude. We love where we come from and love even more the fact that our city has our back - where we will be closing out some of the final shows of tour: June 1st and 2nd at Saint Rocke on 2nd Street and PCH in Hermosa Beach, California.

Do you all share the same sort of music tastes, roughly? Do you tend to listen to older stuff – or dip into a lot of new music?

We all have, relatively, some of the same taste in music, but we also like all different kinds of music. Collectively, being from Los Angeles, California there’s a melting pot of music and It is hard to just like one genre.

We all grew loving bands like Red Hot Chili Peppers, Sublime; Beastie Boys, Nirvana; Public Enemy, 2 Pac; Biggie, Eminem; Anthrax, Rage Against the Machine; Steel Pulse, Bob Marley; Long Beach Dub Allstars; Stevie Wonder, Bob Dylan; Daft Punk…the list goes on and on and on; we love music to say the least, so there are many, many more. 

What do you all hope to achieve in 2018?

We hope to Tour Europe, Asia; meet new fans, spread positive vibes and positive music; keeping the vibes alive and spreading our message.

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Can we catch you perform anytime soon? What dates do you have coming up?

Illuminate spring tour dates:

4/24 - Dallas, TX

4/25 - San Antonio, TX

4/26 - Corpus Christi, TX

4/28 - Knoxville, TN

5/1 - Atlanta, GA

5/2 - Jacksonville, FL

5/4 - Cocoa Beach, FL

5/6 - Miami, FL

5/8 - Wilmington, NC

5/9 - Durham, NC

5/10 - Virginia Beach, VA

5/11 - Vienna, VA

5/12 - Brooklyn, NY

5/13 - New Bedford, MA 

5/15 - Pittsburgh, PA

5/16 - Grand Rapids, MI

5/17 - Columbus, OH 

5/18 - Chicago, IL

5/19 - St. Louis, MO

5/20 - Omaha, NE

5/23 - Pueblo, CO

5/24 - Denver, CO

5/25 - Salt Lake City, UT

5/26 - Boise, ID

5/27 - Seattle, WA

5/31 - Santa Cruz, CA 

6/1 - Hermosa Beach, CA

6/2 - Hermosa Beach, CA

6/3 - San Diego, CA

Have you each got a favourite memory from your time in music – the one that sticks in the mind?

Just being able to perform and do what we love on a daily is a true blessing.  

What advice would you give to new artists coming through?

Work hard, practice; stay honest and true to yourselves. Don’t get caught up in all the facades or masks of ego we, as people, create for ourselves.

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Are there any new artists you recommend we check out?

Ease Up, LAW; The Late Ones, Jason J; Anthony Francisco, Lea Love; Yuja Wang. I mean, there is so much talent constantly emerging from all over the world that it’s so tough to keep up with the times...

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IN THIS PHOTO: Lea Love

Do you all get much time to chill away from music? How do you unwind?

Yes, and we love spending time with our families and children (for Mets & Moi). We also love to surf, camp; yoga, BBQ; breakdance and jam music, paint; create or just catch up on sleep…

Finally, and for being good sports; you can each choose a song and I’ll play it here (not any of your music - I will do that).

Moi: Sammy JohnsonDon’t Say Goodbye

MetsIt’s Alright, Ma (I’m Only Bleeding) Bob Dylan

Dre: All Time Low - Joe Bellion

Pat: The BoxSnot

Steve: Trade It AllCory Henry & The Funk Apostles

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INTERVIEW: Dante Matas

INTERVIEW:

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Dante Matas

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I am kicking off this week by speaking…

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with Dante Matas about his latest track, Everything Nearly Fell Apart Completely. He talks about his upcoming album, A Colourful Headache (out on 4th May), and the themes that inspired it; when music came into his life; who he ranks as influences – I ask whether the songwriter has any gigs booked in.

The Canadian reveals whether he is coming to the U.K.; I ask which three albums mean the most to Matas; how he spends his free spaces away from music; whether there are any special memories from his time in music – he recommends a new artist that is worth some affection and appreciation.

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Hi, Dante. How are you? How has your week been?

I’m doing well, thanks! My week has so far consisted of teaching, practicing for our upcoming show at In the Soil festival in St. Catharines, Ontario and prepping for our tour next month!

For those new to your music; can you introduce yourself, please?

I’m Dante Matas. I make music across genres like Psychedelic-Rock, Synth-Pop, and Indie-Folk. I’ve been playing and recording music for over a decade now - and writing songs for even longer. I’ve recently started playing music with a full band and we go by the name ‘Dante Matas and the Infernal Racket’. I play synth, acoustic guitar and sing in the band. The other members are my good friends Colin McNally (Drums), Omar Shabbar (Guitar) and Joseph Landau (Bass).

Everything Nearly Fell Apart Completely is your new single. Can you talk about its origin and creation?

I came up with the main chorus melody for Everything Nearly Fell Apart Completely, probably, five years ago. That might seem crazy, but it’s true - I have the iPhone memos to prove it. This was one of those songs that I didn’t rush at all (obviously) and, instead, let happen naturally. I don’t always do that: sometimes, songs happen very quickly.

Over the next few years, I would get a new idea for another part or a lyric and add it to the song. Last summer, I decided to record everything I had come up with and ended up with a song almost seven minutes long (!). After some crazy editing, I ended up with the single as it exists today.

I actually played that seven-minute version of the song with a huge band live at Dundas Square in Toronto last summer. It was tons of fun!

Will there be more material coming later down the line?

On May 4th, I will be releasing my new album, A Colourful Headache, of which the single, Everything Nearly Fell Apart Completely, is a part of. This is really my first official full-length, so I’m super-excited to get it out there. It has lots of vocal melodies weaving around each other; some laser beam synth hooks, lo-fi punchy drums; effected electric guitar and lots of distorted bass slides. It’s quite different to my last E.P., which was a very straight-ahead Indie-Folk record.

Beyond that, I am already writing music for the next record and I can’t wait to start work on it once I get back from tour!

Can you remember when music came into your life? Was there a single moment where you decided to pursue music and do it as a career?

Music came into my life when I was maybe six-years-old and I first acknowledged what a melody was. The melody, in particular, was Ode to Joy and it was the most beautiful thing my six-year-old mind thought was possible. So; I was hooked after that.

Once I started playing the guitar in my early-teens; I noticed that writing music was the most rewarding thing I could do and I basically decided to dedicate my life to it. Of course, it’s, obviously, not that simple and there is much more to being a professional musician! I figured I’d have to learn the rest along the way.

I’m still doing that now - and I’m loving every second of it.

Which musicians did you grow up around? Who do you count as idols?

No one in my family really played music, so the only musicians I grew up around were my music teachers and my friends. I went to an arts high-school and, during breaks, my friends and I would sneak into the practice rooms and write music. I say ‘sneak’, because was in the visual art program at the school - so, I probably wasn’t supposed to be there.

My idols would have to be the musicians I looked up to when I was growing up, namely The Beatles, Radiohead and Leonard Cohen.

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Do you have any gigs lined up? Where are you heading?

We leave for the main leg of the tour in mid-May. We’ll be hitting up places like Halifax, Charlottetown; Montreal, Ottawa and so many more. We’ll also be joined by our friend and Folk artist, Mike Legere, who also helped engineer A Colourful Headache.

We will also be having a big hometown release show at Burdock, in Toronto, on June 21st!

Will we see you come over to the U.K.?

Definitely. Our next tour will see us going international and we would love to come to the U.K. It’s something we are going to work towards for 2019.

What do you hope to achieve in 2018?

I hope to get A Colourful Headache to all the people that would enjoy hearing it. I hope to keep playing bigger shows and to continue learning about music and the music industry. I hope to finish recording a new collection of songs by the end of the year so we can put out another release in early-2019.  

Have you got a favourite memory from your time in music – the one that sticks in the mind?

There are so many, but I think making my first E.P. back in high-school was a really memorable experience...

My bandmates and I had no idea what we were doing but, at least for me, it made me fall in love with recording. I had been messing around with GarageBand on my computer before then, but going into an actual studio made me look at music from a producer’s perspective for the first time.

If you could select the three albums that mean the most to you; which would they be and why?

Radiohead - Ok Computer

I know everyone likes this record, but it was one of the first records I bought as a kid. The first time I listened to it was on a cold Toronto winter day and I wrapped myself in a bunch of blankets and read the lyric booklet along with it. Definitely a very meaningful record to me.

Sufjan Stevens - Age of Adz

I love this record because of how complicated the emotions are. A lot of artists tend to write sad music and really explore the depth of that. So many Pop songs are about heartbreak that, sometimes, we can forget that all emotions are equally complex. On Age of Adz; Sufjan goes all over the place and it’s really something special.

The Magnetic Fields - 69 Love Songs

This record is (so) unique. It has sixty-nine songs and every single one is a perfectly-crafted Pop song. There are beautiful melodies all over the place and, frankly, hilarious lyrics in every track.

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What advice would you give to new artists coming through?

On creativity: songs and hooks are not the same thing. Songs tell stories; hooks get stuck in people’s heads. If you have only hooks then your music will be catchy but feel empty. If you don’t have any hooks then no one will sing along. Also; don’t listen to other people (like me): just make up your own rules over time through trial and error.

On getting your music heard: just keep going, but always believe in the music you’re putting out. If you do that and you’re honest with yourself about how good it is, you’ll only ever get better and people will eventually respond to it.

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IN THIS PHOTO: Natalie Prass

Are there any new artists you recommend we check out?

I recently got into Natalie Prass; especially her single, Short Court Style. I love the groove of the bass and guitar - and the chorus is super-catchy. The music video makes me dizzy, though. I’d love to see her live!

Do you get much time to chill away from music? How do you unwind?

Between work and booking tours, recording; writing and playing live, I don’t do much else. I like going out with my friends now and then as well as seeing live music. I’m excited to see Paul Simon, Radiohead and The Magnetic Fields all in the next few months!

Finally, and for being a good sport; you can choose a song and I’ll play it here (not any of your music - I will do that).

I’ve got to go with that Natalie Prass song - it’s just too good.

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INTERVIEW: Ay Wing

INTERVIEW:

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PHOTO CREDITSara Herrlander

Ay Wing

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HER latest single boasts a sound and brilliance…

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that lodges firmly in the brain and gets the blood racing. I was eager to speak with Ay Wing about Strange and its evocative video. She tells me what it is like to create and live in Berlin; what gigs she has booked in the diary; a few albums that mean a lot to her – the songwriter recommends a new artist we need to look out for.

I ask Ay Wing about her E.P., Ice Cream Dream, and what it was like recording it. She tells me about artists who inspired her to get into songwriting; how she spends time away from music; what advice she would give to new artists coming through – she ends the interview by selecting a pretty sweet song.

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Hi, Ay Wing. How are you? How has your week been?

Quite overwhelming. It’s nice to get so much feedback for the music video to Strange.

For those new to your music; can you introduce yourself, please?

I’m a female producer and songwriter currently living in Berlin, writing tunes in the basement. So, my lack of vitamin D this year is pretty high…

Strange is your current track. What is the story behind that song?

Strange tries to find humour in an age where many of our own identities seem based on an InstaFilter and the 'right angle'.

The hook of Strange is actually a quote from an old man that asked us for directions. We were grocery shopping in our P.J.s, as you do in Berlin and, when we couldn’t help, he asked “Are you strange?" before he left.

We liked that a lot, so we kept it.

Talk to me about the cast of characters and vision in the video. What was it like seeing it all come to life?!

It was fun to get into the role of these iconic female characters. I guess I needed a reason to dress up. I had to watch all the movies again and learn their facial expressions and movements, which was quite a tricky thing for me (but a fun experience). I had an amazing team.

Yvonne Wrengler did a fantastic make-up job. Josué Cifuentes filmed it and Emily Josefine directed the video. Raphael Lepeu played The Thing and The Dragon and made me laugh during the shoot - and Martin Riesen did all the aftereffects magic.

Ice Cream Dream, your E.P., has been unleashed. Did you learn a lot about yourself whilst making the E.P.? What is your favourite cut of the pack?

I loved the process of creating. You learn a lot about yourself, about your patience; about working in a team and decision-making.

My favourite one is probably LA. It’s bouncy and has a deeper meaning.

It seems colour and vibrancy is integral to you. Do you want the listener to feel more alive when listening to your music?

That would be wonderful - if they feel more alive when they listen to it. When I create, I don’t try to think too much; I just do what I feel without thinking of any genres or outcome. 

Are there particular musicians who have influenced you and made a big impression?

I love musicians who don’t take themselves too seriously, such as The Beatles, Damon Albarn and Eminem. I love the humour in their music - and they definitely have influenced me in some ways.

You are based in Berlin. Is it a great city to make music in? Would you recommend others to come over and investigate?

I think it’s a great city. There is room for every kind of quirky project and I feel like there is a good sense of community out there. I would definitely recommend it. People help each other out. 

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Do you have any gigs lined up? Where are you heading?

I play at Klunkerkranich on 2nd May in Berlin; Twin Lakes Festivals on 1st September; then, some gigs in Switzerland and, in October, I’m heading to the U.K. again for some shows.

What do you hope to achieve in 2018?

To get my next E.P. and more videos out...and play more shows.

Have you got a favourite memory from your time in music – the one that sticks in the mind?

There are so many beautiful ones.

I recently played for Sofar Sounds Edinburgh at Usher Hall. The crew was incredibly nice and well-organised - and the audience was such an attentive one. It was certainly one of the nicest experience I encountered this year.

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If you could select the three albums that mean the most to you; which would they be and why?

The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill (Lauryn Hill); Nirvana’s Nevermind and Father John Misty’s Pure Comedy

These are all albums that I could listen to all day long – ones that inspired my songwriting.

What advice would you give to new artists coming through?

Try to find your own style of music and don’t listen too much to other opinions: you’ll eventually find your niche and people will resonate with your music if you create music you truly love.

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IMAGE CREDITJulie Moorhouse

Are there any new artists you recommend we check out?

I recently played a London show with the band, BOKITO. I can highly recommend them; one of the best live acts I’ve seen in a while…

Do you get much time to chill away from music? How do you unwind?

At the moment, I try hard to make space to unwind and go to nature. That helps.

Finally, and for being a good sport; you can choose a song and I’ll play it here (not any of your music - I will do that).

BOKITO - Love Gotten

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FEATURE: Return of the Four-String Sting: Songs That Highlight the Power of the Bass Guitar

FEATURE:

 

Return of the Four-String Sting

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 ALL PHOTOS: Unsplash 

Songs That Highlight the Power of the Bass Guitar

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THERE is that running joke where the bass guitar…

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is seen as the slightly unathletic kid who is picked last in the playground. Once the smoking and rebellious electric guitar is picked; the next selection is the muscular and stern percussion. Then, you have the striking and popular singer that is a natural teammate. Then, when you have picked the sought-after kids; you scan around and look for rank-and-file people to complete the team. Bass guitar, sadly, is left until the end - seen as a bit of filler. I know many musicians who rate the bass and wield it to great effect. Whilst few of us ever do an epic ‘bass solo’ to songs; it is that crucial part of the song mix and has been responsible for elevating merely great songs to heavenly heights. Whether it is funky finger-picking and some beautifully nimble playing; a strident and ambitious bit of bass strutting – it infuses the song with melody, rhythm and physicality. It can drive a song and galvanise other players; it can bring new light to a piece and, if given the chance, stand out alone and steal the spotlight. I have selected some songs, from various genre and periods, which show how essential and underrated the bass is. I hope the collection of songs makes people rethink their priorities and realise the kid that always gets picked last is, in fact, rather…

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SPECIAL and integral.

FEATURE: Bavarian Forest Sonata: The Artists Pushing the Limits of Sound

FEATURE:

 

Bavarian Forest Sonata

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 PHOTO CREDIT: Unsplash 

The Artists Pushing the Limits of Sound

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SO much of what we hear today…

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IN THIS PHOTO: Kamasi Washington/PHOTO CREDIT: Press/Getty Images

is all about forcing notes down the throat and sort of ‘getting to the point’. They say people can judge a song in the first thirty seconds: after that, they will stay with it or skip onto the next one. At a time when we are streaming music and buying albums in digital form; we tend to pick and choose our songs based on the first few seconds and whether they strike a chord. People buy albums but we are much more involved with single songs and browsing the full library of music. Even if we do buy a record; we tend to have our favourite tracks and gravitate towards certain tones. Pop music is changing and, even though it will not relinquish its spot in the forefront; the style that is being projected by its biggest newcomers has altered. More mature and inward-looking artists are writing about personal anxieties and pressures: we have more traditional Pop numbers but the whole music is changing, in fact. Even if there are shifts happening in every genre; there is still that thirty-second-rule: get the people hooked, either by energy and hooks or something beautiful and meaningful. Because of this, I am seeing that dependence on vocals and the power of the voice. Lyrics are important but, largely, we concentrate on the vocal and what it can deliver.

Even when we are hooked to the music – a chunky riff or pulsating percussion; some great, electronic rush or coda – we rarely get chance to indulge in the music and get blown away. Maybe we are less patient as a people or prefer our music tighter and less experimental. I want to mention a few artists: Kamasi Washington, Hannah Peel and Goat. The latter is a Swedish fusion group whose current album, Fuzzed in Europe, was met with critical acclaim. The single, Let It Burn, has been doing the rounds on radio and is a fantastically imaginative and galloping work with its tribal drums and epic build. It has the sound of a modern-day Progressive-Rock song. The way it goes through phases and grows larger and more animalistic. Goat have created something that relies on compositional brilliance; taking the listener somewhere wonderful and producing one of the finest singles of the year so far. You listen to a song like Let It Burn and you can feel that cinematic and dramatic sensation. The song was specifically written for the climactic scene in the short film, Killing Gävle. The six-minute-plus fuzzed-out gem has those rollicking drums and ‘fuzzwah’ guitar sounds; a bit of fuzzy bass and epic flute breakdown. Leading to the string-heavy final; it is a biblical and staggering thing that does not need to rely on layers of production and vocals.

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IN THIS PHOTO: Hannah Peel/PHOTO CREDIT: Getty Images

Another artist, Hannah Peel, used brass and Classical elements in her music. Whereas Goat’s latest track is primal and urgent; Peel opens up more and creates something spacey and intergalactic. Her 2017 album, Mary Casio: Journey to Cassiopeia was a critical success and is a seven-track release that takes us through the cosmos and provokes images of the stars, planets and galaxies. It relies on the imagination and the listener’s willingness to succumb to the music. It is hard to say what genre (the music is) but the Northern Irish artist has taken Electronic music in new directions. The songs, or ‘movements’, use traditional colliery brass and it explores one person’s exploration to outer-space. It is documents an elderly, pioneering Electronic music stargazer and her lifelong dream to leave her Yorkshire home in Barnsley and see Cassiopeia. The record was recorded live in the Barnsley Civic and combines analogue synths and some incredible brass. One listens to the song and you are immersed in the soundscapes and wonderful twists and turns. It is a physical experience; Mary Casio: Journey to Cassiopeia takes the listener by the hand and brings them into this starry, magical world. It does not need to rely on voices and traditional guitar-bass-drum combinations. I have heard few composers like Hannah Peel who can take brass and Electronic sounds and make them accessible and wonderful. Maybe there are a few likeminded artists around right now: I have not seen anyone who possesses the same imagination and brilliance.

Heaven and Earth is the upcoming album, a sixteen-track release, and will be out towards the end of June. It is his first new album in a few years and shows he has lost none of his step. Fists of Fury is the lead-off track from the record and has been getting some radioplay right now. The fact it is over nine minutes means few will regularly play it. No matter, though; the song is a stunning and expansive work that features choral vocals and spirited horns. It is hard to put into words – you can hear the song a bit further down – and is proof Washington is among the finest composers and musical minds we have right now. If Hannah Peel is bringing Electronic music to new worlds; Goat are doing something radical with drums and more conventional instruments/genres – Washington is bringing Jazz to new heights. There are those who turn their nose at up at Jazz music and feel all of it holds no merit. I am not a huge fan of the genre but have always appreciated how the masters of the form can settle the mood and elevate the spirits; seduce the mind and get the blood rushing – sometimes, in the space of a single song! Kamasi Washington mixes the more ambitious and epic moments of Miles Davis but, in reality, stands out in a league of his own. It will be interesting seeing how Heaven and Earth will be received.

There are some great artists out there but, to me, there are few as scintillating and mesmeric as Nils Frahm. So far, I have brought you wonderful Swedish, British and American music: let us bring a German genius into the mix. One of my favourite discoveries is Frahm and his brilliant album, All Melody. It was released earlier this year and is another record that has picked up rave reviews. This year has seen some immense albums – everyone from Goat Girl to Kasey Musgraves – but they are more of what you’d expect from modern music. Frahm is someone who works with Electronic music but is a modern-day Classical composer. He can do dramatic and stirring: it is when he is at his most romantic and tender the shivers start and the jaw drops. Listen to a song like My Friend the Forest (below) and you can see what I mean. Frahm is an unconventional composer who mixes grand and upright piano; a Roland Juno-60 and Rhodes piano with Moog Taurus and drum machines. It is the way he manages to blend keys and Classical periods that amazes me. A song like My Friend the Forest is so sparse and open. You can hear him pressing on the foot pedal and the odd clatter and hiss of the tape; it is as naked and revealing a performance as you will hear all year.

Forever Changeless and All Melody are tracks that play with sound and mix styles with incredible conviction and brilliance – the latter is an Electronic number that departs from what one might usually expect. You’d think an album that pushes those contrasts and extremes together would not work and hang together. Everything flows purely – the only minor fault is Frahm’s treatment of the human voice and how it is less effective than anything else on the album. I have highlighted these artists because they rely on compositions and throw few vocals into the mix. We often listen to music and know what to expect. There will be vocals at some point and lyrics we can learn from; the songs are usually quite short and, when it is over, we can move onto something else. How many of us take the time to sit down and engage with a song that runs a little longer and emphasises compositional elements? It is no coincidence that Goat’s new single is being tipped as a year-best; Kamasi Washington is being hailed as a pioneer – musicians who go the extra mile and change the rules. I have only mentioned four artists but they represent a wider point. Many of us overlook sonic pieces and artists who engage the imagination and suck us into their worlds. I am obsessed with sound and, in a scene where we want something quick and familiar; these are the artists who rebel against that and produce mind-melting, knee-buckling works. Take a moment to think about the music we listen to and whether we take time to investigate musicians who place emphasis on composition. Take a listen to the songs included in this piece and try and argue against the fact that they are wonderful…

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IN THIS PHOTO: Nils Frahm/PHOTO CREDIT: Getty Images

WORKS of brilliance.

FEATURE: No Teasers, Please: Why Arctic Monkeys’ Plan for Their New Album Is a Stunning Move

FEATURE:

 

No Teasers, Please

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 PHOTO CREDIT: Getty Images 

Why Arctic Monkeys’ Plan for Their New Album Is a Stunning Move

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THEY tease and tempt us with their alluring promise…

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PHOTO CREDIT: Unsplash

and bounteous, luscious potential. We are all eager to rip into Arctic Monkeys’ new album, Tranquility Base Hotel + Casino. The record is out on 11th May and is the Sheffield band’s sixth album. The group exploded onto the scene back in 2006 and, since then, have established themselves as one of the most essential and intelligent acts we have ever produced. There was a lot of speculation as to who the band were back on their debut – a bit unknown and, on their 2006, we asked Who the Fuck Are Arctic Monkeys? What usually happens after a five-year gap – they released AM in 2013 – is the record label hurries around and gets all their plans together. We normally have a little teaser video and that announcement of an album. Then, after that, comes the first single that is played to death on the radio. When we have all been exposed to that song, a few weeks later, there are plans to unveil the second single. We might hear four or five songs from an album before the actual thing is out! It is understandable a record label would want an album promoted as much as possible and to get it ahead of the competition. Most of us are used to the process and it is the way things are done nowadays. I get a bit bored of that cycle because, after you have digested those songs, you are either sick of that album or tired of the artist.

When you do get the album; you know those set of songs well and the other half (of the album) is new. It can seem rather disjointed and two-tone when you have these well-played and worn songs alongside the foreign cuts. Maybe you skip those singles you have heard and investigate something new. In any case; one is always a little bored about the endless build-up and circus around an album. In the case of Arctic Monkeys; the circumstances around Tranquility Base Hotel + Casino are unique. The band have come back after that five-year pause and they are releasing one of the most anticipated albums of the year. Their plan is to keep all the material private until 11th May – that is when you can experience an album in its entirety. This is a bold move for the band – one that DIY, having already reviewed the album, explained... – that will get some raised eyebrows:

To cut to the obvious chase, the quartet’s long-awaited sixth is like nothing they’ve done before. An Alex Turner solo record by any other name, its 11 tracks run largely on the singer’s affected croon and a newly-discovered love of the piano. Rarely do guitars make a pronounced appearance, save for the ominous notes that open ‘Golden Trunks’ and a few slinking bass lines on ‘She Looks Like Fun’ and ‘Four Out Of Five’. What powerhouse drummer Matt Helders is going to busy himself with during live shows, meanwhile, is anyone’s guess…

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 PHOTO CREDIT: Getty Images   

An album that only even begins to click after about the tenth listen, Arctic Monkeys’ sixth is the kind of eyebrow-raising curveball that could still yet lead to brilliance. Every maverick has to risk it all in pursuit of the new at some point. But there’s still something a little sad about having to try so hard to fall in love with a record from a band who’ve always made devotion so easy. Who the fuck are Arctic Monkeys? It seems only time will tell”.

It seems the new arrival from Arctic Monkeys is not what anyone expected. More an Alex Turner solo album or strange concept record – the full review shed more light – it seems like one of those albums that will get retrospective acclaim and understanding. Maybe that is what the five years have been about: brewing something that departs from the predictable path we expect and takes the band in a new direction. This is not the only time a big-name act has unveiled an album without a single coming from it – or dropped it straight out of the blue. Radiohead, in 2007, did it with In Rainbows; Beyoncé released her fifth solo album in 2013 without much knowledge; Kendrick Lamar’s untitled.unmastered arrived in 2016 and took us all off-guard. Labels love the build-up and normal procedure because it is all meticulous and allows them to test the water and see what reception the album will be afforded.

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PHOTO CREDIT: Unsplash

I guess smaller artists do not have the cachet to do a surprise release and subvert the desires of labels and the public. In a way, Arctic Monkeys have created more excitement and fever with their new album. Even though the first review – the one I can find – is a three-star thing (the writer unsure whether Tranquility Base Hotel + Casino is a masterstroke or a confused work); that might be the story of 2018. All the artists who promised big, scene-shattering albums (including Jack White) have sort of come short and not really fulfilled their promise. Every artist reaches a stage where they change things up and go in a new direction. It would have been easy for Arctic Monkeys to release the long-awaited single and the Internet to jump on it. Given the fact their latest album is a concept and a bit of a left-turn; there might have been criticism and the songs might seem unusual and under-nourished out of the context of the album. It seems like all the songs need to be heard together: Tranquility Base Hotel + Casino is an experience and cinematic piece, it seems. A director would not release five-minute sections of a film before it comes on release. They put out trailers but you do not portion out a film before it goes into the cinemas. Music is unusual in the way it is released and promoted.

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IN THIS IMAGE: The album cover for Arctic Monkeys' AM/IMAGE CREDIT: Getty Images 

Arctic Monkeys have had people breathing down their necks and been keeping us guessing for a while now. 2018 is there year and, because of that, they had the choice of whether to do a standard release – all the singles and interviews – or put an album out there and let people enjoy it. Their decision takes my mind back when I was a child and experiencing music. Sure; there may have been a single or two floating around but it was not unusual for a big act to release an album without any singles coming out. They wanted the public to enjoy the entire thing and, in essence, buy the record! People could listen to an L.P. in its entirety and get a much better picture of its sounds and themes – without the subjective and misleading influence of drip-feeding and slow-build. Maybe it is a generational thing: many younger listeners like getting songs before an album’s out and getting to witness this event and process. It depends on tastes, I guess, but I am more bonded and committed to a record if I have to wait and witness the music as a single thing. One of the reasons I was a bit disheartened listening to Jack White’s Boarding House Reach was I heard several of the songs at different stages. I then god the album and was listening to these familiar tracks alongside new ones.

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PHOTO CREDIT: Unsplash

I had, in essence, heard the best from the record and was hearing music that didn’t really match what was already out. There is no guarantee my perception of the album would have been different had there been no singles from it. Arctic Monkeys have Tranquility Base Hotel + Casino out and, forgive them, they do not want to give too much away. I feel other bands and artists should take a bold approach like this. It is always risky doing this kind of thing if you do not have a salivating fanbase and that commercial profit. Arctic Monkeys, back on their 2006 debut, were already known and people had heard their music. They did not embark on the streaming flow – sites like YouTube were brand-new then – and would not have been able to ignore the promotional process if they were new in 2018. I would, mind, like to see more artists stepping away from the routine and ever-lasting routine of releasing songs one-by-one and, by the time the album comes out; we have heard half the album and it is all rather staid. Regardless of how critics receive Tranquility Base Hotel + Casino on 11th May – it looks like it could be that classic three-star record – it has been worth the wait and patience. People do not know what to expect and, for the first time in years; we are actually looking at reviews and learning about an album’s content in traditional ways. It is a shame the hard copy of NME is no longer around: a write-up about Arctic Monkeys would have been a perfect reason to buy the magazine and digest the review. Let us embrace artists who want to defy the normal and take music back to its basic brilliance. I am looking forward to Tranquility Base Hotel + Casino and am interested to see how Arctic Monkeys have evolved: going from tundra-walking primates to a spacey, casino-based bunch of blokes. Maybe it will balkanised and divide the fans but, in true Arctic Monkeys style, their new album will be anything…

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PHOTO CREDIT: Getty Images

BUT boring!

INTERVIEW: The Right Now

INTERVIEW:

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 The Right Now

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IT has been a while since I’ve featured an artist from Chicago…

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so it is great to speak with The Right Now about their music and formation. The band has been playing for ten years and will play a joint-anniversary show with 56 Hope Road (celebrating twenty years together). I ask whether there will be other gigs coming and when we might expect some new material from the band.

The Soul band are one of the hottest in Illinois and I asked what the scene is like in Chicago; if there are any new acts we should check out; if the band are coming to the U.K. this year – Brendan and Stefanie, who answer the questions, talk about life away from music and working with the Hope for a Day charity.

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Hi, guys. How are you? How has your week been?

Brendan: It’s been great! We’ve been busy rehearsing, planning and doing interviews for the big tenth-anniversary show on Friday.

Stefanie: It’s been a great week. We are really looking forward to this ten-year anniversary show and there has been sun finally in Chicago...all good things.

For those new to your music; can you introduce yourselves, please?

Brendan: We are The Right Now; a seven-piece Soul band from Chicago, featuring the powerhouse lead vocals of Stefanie Berecz.

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You are teaming up with 56 Hope Road for a hometown show. What can you tell us about that?

Yes! We’re so excited to celebrate our tenth year together as a band. It’s been a long road as we’ve played over five-hundred shows, released three albums and spent way, way too much time together. But really this band is centered on deep friendships and love…

It’s been an incredible ride together.

Stefanie: I remember some of our first shows on the road together, included playing spots that 56 (Hope Road) would recommend to us as we were just getting started. They sort of took us under their wing and played this ‘big brother’ in the business role.

This show is going to be a celebration of the family we grew into and the music we were inspired to create over all these years.

56 Hope Road are celebrating twenty years as a band. Have you been following them a while?

Brendan: There isn’t a more appropriate band that can join us for this anniversary show. We met 56 when our guitarist, Chris Corsale, joined our band in 2008 (Chris played with 56 for years). I went to lunch with 56’s drummer, Greg Fundis, and he basically schooled me in the ways of ‘starting a real band’: how to tour, promote shows; budget correctly and so on. We learned so much from those guys and girl. They are family, so it’s truly a blessing to be able to share this special bill with them.

Hope for the Day, a charity that raises awareness of suicide, is close to your heart – you are celebrating your tenth anniversary, as a dual anniversary show, and proceeds will go to the charity. What was it about Hope for the Day that compelled you to make that decision?

Stefanie: We are celebrating our tenth-anniversary this week but this month also marked the year anniversary since I lost my best friend and incredible father to my two children, David Grinslade. This band is family and, when we experience a loss, we all come together and rally together. That is what we are trying to do through this immense loss. David was the closest person to me and it pains me every day to think he was struggling with such dark thoughts and couldn’t express the mental pain he was experiencing. 

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Our goal in partnering with an organization like Hope for the Day is to face the scary subject of mental-health and suicide. We want to play our part as human beings who believe in love and being there for each other. We are dedicated to making mental-health a safer thing to talk about. The choice to share our story has opened a channel to connect with fans on a deeper level and most importantly connect with those who might be struggling.

Looking back at your decade in music; how do you think you have progressed and grown?

Brendan: I only need to listen to songs I wrote in 2008, or look at pictures of our band, to really see just how much we’ve grown. The songs, now, are so much more focused in every way: lyrics, arrangements and melody. Everything just serves a more pointed purpose - and we’re really aiming higher, I think.

We’re doing a much better job of putting Stef’s voice on display and connecting with people. Oh, man; some of these photos from 2008 - I can’t believe I ever wore sandals or allowed our bassist to wear shorts. Now, it’s dapper suits…

Definitely a better look!

What do you feel is the secret to longevity? Do you feel too few modern bands have staying power?

Just keep going, no matter what. That’s the best advice I can give. No one else is going to do it for you, ultimately, and you need to find the internal drive and ambition to keep writing, touring; recording and everything else…and it pays off! I feel like, in our tenth year, we’re finally reaping the harvest of the seeds we’ve sprinkled over the past decade…

Stefanie: I would echo what Brendan said and add that you just have to align yourself with the right group of people who will continue to inspire and support you along your growth.  

Will you be releasing music this year? What is in the pipeline?

Brendan: Yes! With the political dumpster fire that’s been happening in our country, we felt that it was important to make a strong stand and record a political cover from the 1960s (perhaps the last time that this country felt so lost). We’re releasing a cover of Buffalo Springfield’s For What It’s Worth later this year. We rearranged it as an Afrobeat tune and recorded it in this crazy nineteenth-century church in central New York last October. The amazing Sergio Rios from Orgone/Killion Sound mixed it.

We also have plans for a remix 12” with Chicago’s own Star Creature. These are really dope Disco and Boogie Funk remixes of songs from last year’s Starlight.

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Chicago is where you are based. How important are the city and its people? What is the scene like there in 2018?

This is the best city in the world. Aside from the obvious (pizza, hot dogs and the Cubs) there is a deep and rich musical history, especially in Soul. I think you can trace it back to Muddy Waters and draw a line to The Staple Singers, Curtis Mayfield; Chaka Khan, Donny Hathaway; Syl Johnson and on and on. (I love so much about Chicago). The music scene has great players and bands, but I think the downside is the lack of support for artists in the ‘middle’ (folks like us that aren’t starting out but aren’t Chance the Rapper).

We have a few radio stations like Vocalo, CHIRP and WLUW that support the local scene, but there isn’t a great deal of synchronicity between the promoters, clubs; fests, fans; radio, blogs and bands. It sort of seems like a free-for-all where you have to hustle and grab whatever you can. Which is very ‘Chicago’. It’s made me work my ass off to achieve what we can.

How did The Right Now get together? When did that first meeting take place?

Brendan: Stef and I met in a restaurant called Cooper’s in 2006 in a very random way. I was playing there with my previous band and the owners (Stef’s friends) asked if she could sit in. I was hesitant at first but relented. Stef sang Natural Woman and I was immediately hooked.

I decided that she should sing with my band and she eventually agreed. We’ve been writing songs and performing together ever since.

Stefanie: It’s crazy to think back on that chance meeting and now, years later, have such a remarkable story to tell. I think it hits me most when my kids start recalling memories of this band.

Do you have any gigs lined up? Where are you heading?

Brendan: We have an incredibly busy spring and summer with club shows and fests all over the Midwest and East Coast. All our tour dates are at www.therightnow.com/tour.

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Can we expect to see you in the U.K. this year?

Brendan: I wish! It’s a dream of mine to tour Europe. We’re still waiting for it to all line up. This could be the year…

Stefanie: I’m itching for that opportunity. I’d like to think there are a handful of individuals who would appreciate us in the U.K.

What do you hope to achieve in 2018?

Brendan: I want to record most of our next record, play great shows and continue to have a blast with my friends on stage.

Stefanie: I look forward to recording new music and, maybe, a new video! I am also so excited to continue building our relationship with Hope for the Day.

Have you each got a favourite memory from your time in music – the one that sticks in the mind?

Brendan: I think selling out Lincoln Hall in 2010 for our first record release show stands out. We worked so hard on that album and promoting it. It was unbelievably satisfying to look out into that crowd and feel the love!

Stefanie: Selling out any show is always such a stand out memory for sure. I also loved our first time recording a session at Daytrotter. I remember so badly wanting that to happen early on in our career and we got that call this year!

What advice would you give to new artists coming through?

Brendan: I have a four-page Word doc. that I give to new artists...I should probably start charging folks for it! The biggest piece of advice I have is to follow through and do what you say you are going to do. I feel like one of the biggest reasons why we are still around is because I stick to my word and follow up with people.

Oh, also; write good songs with undeniable choruses.

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IN THIS PHOTO: DeRobert & The Half-Truths

Are there any new artists you recommend we check out?

Brendan: He’s not a new artist but DeRobert & The Half-Truths are a killer Soul band from Nashville. JC Brooks Band just released a great E.P. (I co-wrote one of the tunes).

Stefanie: I’ve been digging Charlotte Day Wilson and her new album, Stone Woman (2018)

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Do you all get much time to chill away from music? How do you unwind?

Brendan: Chilling isn’t really part of my life. I have three kids and run a lesson teaching business aside from The Right Now. But, when I do (have time to chill), I love to hang with my wife, putting on records and cooking.

Stefanie: I also have two young children so we live by our calendars and, when a chill day sneaks up on us, we either are glued to the couch watching movies or we get out for something spontaneous.  

Finally, and for being good sports; you can choose a song and I’ll play it here (not any of your music - I will do that).

Brendan: Slow Burn by Kacey Musgraves. Just a beautiful song. Reminds me of mid-'70s Soft-Rock. Hell, yeah!

Stefanie: My Momma Told Me - DeRobert & The Half-Truths

Dee is my Soul brother! Hands down, one of the best vocalists I’ve had the pleasure to work with. This whole band is killing it out there

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Follow The Right Now

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INTERVIEW: David Sinclair Four

INTERVIEW:

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 David Sinclair Four

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THE band has had a slight rejig...

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since I posed questions to them. Regardless of a drumming tweak; I have been speaking with the David Sinclair Four about their upcoming album, Sweet Georgina, and the themes that inspired it. They talk to me about their musical pasts and the new artists they are reacting to - sharing some fond memories they have experienced during their time in music.

I discover what gigs they have booked and how they get such a tight and confident sound; if they get chance to unwind away from music; what advice they would offer new songwriters coming through - the guys each end the interview with a song choice.

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Hi, guys. How are you? How has your weeks been?

David Sinclair (Vocals/Guitar): Busy...

Geoff Peel (Guitar/Vocals): It's been a good week. Spring has finally sprung, we've been rehearsing our live show; the band is sounding great and I got a new fuzz-box with some delightfully insane sounds.

Jos Mendoza (Bass/Vocals): I am great. My week has been intense with work, but I have the David Sinclair Four rehearsals to keep me going and the album launch to keep looking forward to.

Rory Mendoza (Drums): It's been good. I've been rehearsing with the band and running through songs for DS4, having only joined the band recently.

For those new to your music; can you introduce yourselves, please?

DS: I started the band in Shepherds Bush in 2005. It was originally a trio. We became the DS4 when Geoff joined as lead guitarist in 2013, which was also when Jos became our bass player. My son, Jack Sinclair, used to be the drummer. He is now touring the world as a poker star and we have got Jos’ brother Rory in to play the drums...

We like to keep it in the family.

Sweet Georgina is your upcoming album. Can you articulate the themes and influences that go into the record? What are the key emotions you explore throughout?

Geoff and I have written all the songs on the new album. Georgina is our muse. She’s our patron saint – in fact, she’s the patron saint of all bands and songwriters. The key emotions are love, humour; joy and sadness.

It’s about living the life, which we’ve been lucky enough to do for quite a while. I remember an old rockabilly singer from Nashville, Tennessee called Cowboy Jack Clement who said that as musicians: “We’re all in the business of fun; and if we ain’t having fun, then we’re not doing our job”. Amen.

How do you think your latest record differs from everything else the David Sinclair Four has put out?

It doesn’t differ that much. It’s got ten cool songs that each tell a story with my voice and a bunch of Rock & Roll guitars. There’s maybe more emphasis on great tunes this time around - and we’ve got our Scottish Soul sister Becci Wallace involved on the vocals which adds a new harmonic dimension to the classic DS4 sound.

Will there be singles coming from the album?

We’ve already put out Sweet Georgina - the title-track - as a single and the follow-up, Little Rock & Roll. The third single from the album, The Rolling People, is released 4th May.

The band is very tight and together. Did that chemistry come naturally? How did you all meet one another?

Thanks. Geoff and I go back to the 1980s when we were hanging out together in some dark dives in Hammersmith and Jos has known Rory from the day he was born. So; it’s more about biology than chemistry in their case…

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What is the best part of being in the David Sinclair Four? Is it the touring or recording you all gravitate towards?

Geoff: Well; touring and recording are two sides of the same coin. Actually, it's a three-sided coin because the other aspect is writing the songs, which is both hard and richly rewarding. Recording is amazing because that's when the songs come to life and then playing live we get to see how they are received while strutting our funky stuff. Actually, the best part of being in the DS4 is being able to bring all our influences together - Americana, Anglicana; Rock, Psychedelia; Blues, Country; Folk, whatever - mixing them up and seeing what comes out.

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Jos: For me, I have always loved playing live music, and for me, getting up on that stage and playing is what makes it for me. I also play for a Blues/Rock covers band, and it is refreshing to play some original songs I have only re-joined the band after having a few years to focus on teaching, so the recording has not been part of my agenda. Nonetheless, I would love the opportunity to get in the studio again - and I am hoping that there will be more songs to put on an album in the years to come.

Rory: For me, the best part is playing with a bunch of musicians who are talented and know their stuff. It's good fun playing with these guys; I like the music (which is always a plus) and I'm looking forward to playing some gigs.

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Which artists have been influential in terms of your own sound and passion?

Geoff: Hearing Eric Clapton when I was fifteen started me on this whole business but, the older I get, the more I like Stones-era Mick Taylor. Such elegant phrasing and fabulous tone. I love slide playing too and listen to Derek Trucks a lot. In the Country vein, Chris Stapleton has to get a mention, not only for his guitar playing but also for his songwriting and incredible singing.

Jos: Red Hot Chili Peppers (their stuff up from the early days up to By the Way), Jimi Hendrix and Guns N’ Roses are my top-three (right now, anyway; ask me again in a month!) All three had great sound, relentless energy onstage and have the perfect blend of proficiency and feeling the music which, for me, is what makes playing so enjoyable.

Rory: The bands that got me into music were Red Hot Chili Peppers and Dire Straits. I love a variety of music but my preference lies with the heavier side of music, such as Iron Maiden, Aerosmith; Metallica, Rage Against the Machine; Porcupine Tree, Alice in Chains; Queens of the Stone Age...well, you get the idea.

DS: The Stones and Hendrix are the untouchables. Ray Davies and Paul Weller are two of my favourite songwriters.

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Do you have any gigs lined up? Where are you heading?

It all kicks off with our album launch show at The Social, Little Portland Street (W1) on 14th May. We’ve got some special guests (singers and harmonica) and we’ll be doing it in style. Then, we’re moving on to: Notting Hill Arts Club (10th Jun); Albury Festival, Guildford (22nd July); Half Moon, Putney (9th Sep); Crawdaddy, Richmond (26th Oct); Polyfest, Camden (3rd/4th Nov); Dublin Castle, Camden (30th Nov).

There are dates being added all the time, so check our website 

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If you each had to select the one album that means the most you; which would they be and why?

Geoff: There are loads of albums I could choose from, classic and modern, but one which kind of sums up the alt-rock vibe for me is Cracker's Kerosene Hat from 1993: great album, great songs and a great guitarist in the shape of Johnny Hickman.

Jos: I think I would have to go with Jeff Buckley's Grace. Along with having one of the truly great covers in Hallelujah, which is hard to do, it has some great songs that I think will stand the tests of time - and Jeff Buckley is one of those artists who pours all his emotion into his music. This is really felt in the album.

I still remember the day clearly when I first heard Dream Brother and any song that does that must be special. It is musically complete, heartfelt and has remained so over the years. Jeff Buckley is also one of my big influences and I have learnt many songs from the album.

DS: Are You Experienced by The Jimi Hendrix Experience. Everyone can play his guitar parts nowadays. But, people forget what a great singer and songwriter Hendrix was.

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What do you all hope to achieve in 2018?

Geoff: Loads of gigs, new songs and recording - in that order. In my spare time, I'm going to get the acoustic out and crack the Bluegrass code.

Jos: I want to pick up where I left off with my music and start focussing on writing more songs; gain more valuable experience from others and keep going with DS4.

Rory: I'm hoping to play a tonne of gigs with the DS4 and, maybe, help come up with some new material.

DS: Fame and riches beyond belief.

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Have you each got a favourite memory from your time in music – the one that sticks in the mind?

Playing snooker with Ronnie Wood backstage at a stadium in Chicago has got to be up there.

What advice would you give to new artists coming through?

Don’t stop.

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IN THIS PHOTO: Molly Tuttle/PHOTO CREDITAnthony Scarlati Photography

Are there any new artists you recommend we check out?

Molly Tuttle; amazing Californian Bluegrass-picker, singing Townes Van Zandt’s White Freightliner Blues.

Nakhane; South African singer-songwriter. Very stylish. Lovely, high, soulful voice (like David McAlmont); wicked attitude. His band has got Charlotte Hatherley (ex-Ash) on keys and guitar and Keir Adamson on drums (who played on the new DS4 album).

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IN THIS PHOTO: Nakhane/PHOTO CREDIT: Tarryn Hatchett Photography

Maaike Siegerist; ‘Dark Folk’ singer-songwriter from the Netherlands. She will be playing a support set at our launch gig at The Social on 14th May. Lovely voice – operatic range.

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IN THIS PHOTO: Maaike Siegerist/PHOTO CREDIT: Catherine Rudie

Do you get much time to chill away from music? How do you unwind?

David: Down by the canal.

Geoff: I have a sculling boat I keep near Chiswick Bridge. When I want to unwind, there’s nothing better than a long paddle up to Richmond Lock and back.

Jos: Playing is unwinding. It is what I care about and what makes me happy.

Finally, and for being good sports; you can each choose a song and I’ll play it here (not any of your music - I will do that).

Geoff: If you can find it, I’d love it if you could play Every River by Kim Richey. It’s a great song. I never found out who played the lead guitar, and it rocks

David: Jenny Don’t Be Hasty by Paolo Nutini. We used to do a cover of this and it’s still one of my favourite songs. The coolest riff, great melody and neat solo

Jos: Seventh Heaven by Beck from his Colors album (and E-Pro from the Guero album if I'm allowed a second song!)

Rory: Sultans of Swing by Dire Straits

____________

Follow David Sinclair Four

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INTERVIEW: Zkeletonz

INTERVIEW:

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Zkeletonz

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THE business of promotion…

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can be a rather tiring and never-ending one for a musician. They put in so much effort and do their very best to get their music to as many people as possible. I have been lucky enough to grab some time with Zkeletonz as they tell me about their latest single, Always, and what inspired its creation. I ask whether they have favoured memories from their time in music; how the band got together – they reveal whether more material is coming.

I asked the guys about touring and possible gigs; which musicians they count as idols; which new artists they recommend we check out – the guys select a song to end the interview with and tell me how they spend time away from music.

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Hi, guys. How are you? How has your week been?

Been resting in our graveyard between touring stints for the new single, Always; spinning yarns about POSTPOP and the importance of calcium. Richer Sounds, you know; the stereo shops?! They just made us Band of the Week in association with Q Magazine. We liked that!

For those new to your music; can you introduce yourselves, please?

We are the POSTPOP purveyors, princes; pioneers! We provide strong, persistent rhythms and attractive, distinctive melodies. Shake your bones to us…

 

Always is your latest track. Can you reveal the inspiration behind the song?

Sometimes, a partner moves in and you stay up very late partying, fighting or doing an intense mix of both! So, our singer Gav and his girlfriend used to stare out across the street from our apartment to the big art studios opposite producer Ed’s bedroom.

Artists in there used to paint and set up photoshoots so late that he would get annoyed by the lights. We couldn't understand why the artists would want to be on camera so early in the morning! Their building has been totally demolished now (for luxury apartments).

You have built momentum from previous singles, Trouble and Don’t Cover It Up. Can we see any new material arriving later this year?

Absolutely. The first-ever Zkeletonz E.P. is coming this summer.

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The likes of Channel 4 and Radio X have supported your music. Given the fact you are new the industry; how important is that kudos?

Remember the movie Almost Famous? It famously featured Tiny Dancer by Elton John and a fictional band, Stillwater. Well; Stillwater keep telling journalists they ‘play for the fans, not the critics’...until a journalist gets them on the cover of Rolling Stone! We’re similar. Do we make music for P.R. kudos? Hell, no! Are we happy when we get some? Hell, yeah we are!

How did Zkeletonz get together?

Impromptu Hallowe’en-party-instrument-jam of course.

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Which musicians do you all count as idols? Did you all grow up in musical households?

Our parents were all creative but none played or performed professionally in the end. So, we’re from ‘sing-along-to-albums-loudly’ households rather than ‘home-studio’ ones! One of our dads drew Rupert the Bear for a bit; no joke. But; I don’t think Rupert has put any records out himself?!

Our idols include Prince, David Bowie and The Human League - and our household is extremely musical now because we self-produce there!

I believe you have an annual Hallowe’en party. What does that usually entail?!

Absolute debauchery on synthesizers and guitars followed by a load of balls-and-boobs-out Disco and Techno, with a fancy dress contest in the middle. It’s always free and it’s in a really old pub where Samuel Pepys wrote his diaries and, more recently, Sean Paul shot a video with Clean Bandit.

A consistently culturally-relevant venue.

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Do you have any gigs lined up? Where are you heading?

To Brighton twice for The Great Escape and to Hoxton Square Bar & Kitchen in London on Sunday 6th May. Free entry.

What do you hope to achieve in 2018?

We just hope to stay fracture, break and sprain-free. That and play festivals. Nothing else.

Have you each got a favourite memory from your time in music – the one that sticks in the mind?

Ed’s was headlining The Old Blue Last in Shoreditch which is owned and run by Vice Magazine. Gav’s was playing Fuse Festival in his hometown of Lichfield in Staffordshire, or being in the local newspaper there and knowing it was gonna land on his grandma’s doorstep that week.

Will’s was crowning Dr. Zoidberg from Futurama the winner of our first-ever annual fancy dress prize!

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If you could support any musician alive today, and choose your own rider, what would that entail?

French Horn Rebellion do parties called YouTooCanWoo with another band called Pink Flamingo Rhythm Revue. Last week, they invited our friends Lejon to jam on stage with them. It was INSANE. Pure optimism unleashed. We’d do that with them around the U.S.A., especially New York.

The rider would be bottomless Cosmopolitans; purple feather boas for all and extra strobes in every venue.

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What advice would you give to new artists coming through?

Work insanely hard but mediate your expectations. Smile. Stay positive. Talk to people at shows. Take feedback - even when it’s hard to hear. Write lots of new songs. They’re not too precious: they’ll come and go.

It’s the listeners who decide which become classics, not you!

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IN THIS PHOTO: Lejon

Are there any new artists you recommend we check out?

Why, yes! Lejon, Jazz Mino and Kid Cupid are all great. We love remixing and playing with them.

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 IN THIS PHOTO: Jazz Mino

Do you get much time to chill away from music? How do you unwind?

Ed presents a POSTPOP podcast on Boogaloo Radio alongside presenters like Klaxons and Suede. He also makes Techno when he’s not making beats for Zkeletonz or plays Zelda on Nintendo Switch. Gav sings in a community choir and watches documentaries about cults. Will plays Rachmaninoff to his cat on the piano.

Finally, and for being good sports; you can each choose a song and I’ll play it here (not any of your music - I will do that).

Gav: Scissor Sisters - I Don’t Feel Like Dancin’

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Ed: Dirty ProjectorsUp in Hudson

Will: TigaWoke

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Follow Zkeletonz

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TRACK REVIEW: Zoey Lily - Last Goodbye

TRACK REVIEW:

 

Zoey Lily

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Last Goodbye

 

9.2/10

 

Last Goodbye is available via:

https://soundcloud.com/zoeylily/zoey-lily-last-goodbye

GENRE:

Pop

ORIGIN:

London, U.K.

RELEASE DATE:

13th April, 2018

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I have made some decelerations...

with regards my blog and what I am including in the coming months. From a review perspective; I am only going to feature those artists I have not included before – that could be a bad move but it is hard to review the same act and say something different each time I do so (given the length and nature of my reviews). It is exciting featuring Zoey Lily because she is fresh to my reviewing ears – I have interviewed her once – and there is a bit to talk about. I will discuss, for the last time in a bit, images and how vital they are; putting songs together and artists that take care of each stage of the production process; unsigned acts and negotiations with labels; how to stand out in a crowded Pop market; how Popstars are different to previous years in terms of themes and vocal sounds; why Zoey Lily, and her upbringing, puts her in a good position (compared to her peers). I will start out with the social media package: something I have written about a lot but still comes back to my mind. It is important that every new artist, to get maximum traffic and folks flocking their way, looks at a concentrated and clear outlay. Zoey Lily has done well in the sense she has an official website and covers herself across social media and music-sharing websites. The ideal situation is having an official site where all your links are included on the homepage – you can click on each and easily navigate there. Facebook, Twitter and all your other sites would be regularly updated and you’d ensure there are some current images for people to see. I mention this because Zoey Lily is a lot further ahead than most. Her official website is great and she ensures one can see her on every major platform. It is images, again, that is the slight wrinkle. I will drop the argument for a little bit but think it is important that people get to see an artist and there are clear photos. I have managed to find quite a few on Zoey Lily’s pages – they range from older ones to the shots made for her latest single.

A lot of artists, especially under a label, get photos taken for each song. They will have a set of photos for each work and then move onto the next one. Zoey Lily has managed to take a much bigger step than a lot of acts out there. She is organised and keeps her fans abreast; she wants to take care of all her channels and get her music out to the people. The only (minor) suggestion would be to spend a day in London and get a photographer taking, say, ten or so new shots – a great investment that would attract new eyes and get journalists in. Right now, and the reasons I want to review her, is a particular sound that comes to the mind; pleases the senses and invigorates the mind. I will move onto that but, before I do; let us consider those artists who realise the importance of social media and reaching out to their fans. It can be challenging keeping on top of everything and finding the time to update your social media. The days are long and it is hard getting it all sorted and visible. A lot of artists are too busy with music or they struggle to balance work and life. Zoey Lily has a hectic time of things but she is keen to touch her fans and make sure they are kept in the loop. Her sites are easy on the eye and one can navigate around and find out what they need to know. That may sound like a minor consideration but there are few who actually manage to do this. I can understand why it is hard to achieve this but, for those who do, I am impressed. Zoey Lily’s music is evolving and changing; she is getting bolder as an artist and aiming high. If she were to keep her pages the same and take her foot off the gas, then that would compromise her fanbase and popularity. She has a loyal crew out there keen to support the music and, as such, Zoey Lily puts the effort in and does her very best.

I will move on to her song, Last Goodbye, soon but, right now, I wanted to look at those musicians who foster their song from conception and see it through to the very end. Even if that title sounds familiar – it is not a Jeff Buckley or The Kills cover – it is a very different beast and one that is distinctly the work of Zoey Lily. She is an artist who writes a song and makes sure it as good as it can be when it gets to the studio. From there; she will look after the production and handles every process and movement. It is not an ego thing or a way of shutting others out: she is a person who knows how her song needs to sound and has the talent to take care of it all. That multi-discipline approach is something more and more artists are learning these days. Whether this is because many artists are going to music schools or teaching themselves, I am not too sure. We are in an age where technology allows one to make music and produce it without anyone else’s assistance. People can see a song from its start to end and learn a lot of new skills along the way. I feel we are producing more educated and ambitious songwriters. Zoey Lily, as I will explain, grew up around music and she has involved herself in production and recording. Rather than write a song and then throw it over to producers to mould and mangle; there is that determination to produce a singular sound. I am not being down on producers but feel, when you listen to some songs, the producer will put their stamp on it and it does not sound as you’d hope. Having more than one cook in the kitchen can be a fruitful and inspiring thing. I always find those who can produce and engineer a song should go for it. There are a lot of great producers out there who are willing to listen to artists – I always like musicians who can self-produce and take charge of the process.

I want to talk a bit more about this. Music is getting more competitive and, the longer we go on, the more people will come in and the market will be crowded. The same way we need to encourage artists to look at social media and put the package together; production is a skill we should be imparting. It does not mean you have to go to school or spend a lot of money learning from the best. There are tutorials and software available that can provide lessons and it is possible to get a grip of the basics. From there, once you have acquired the foundations; a musician can join with a producer and they can collaborate to create something that sounds great. It is interesting comparing artists who use other producers and those who work alone. A lot of the biggest Pop artists out there – Beyoncé and Rihanna, for instance – use several producers and it can be a way of bringing new life to their music. Different minds will have their own opinions and skills – that can be beneficial if you want to create a varied album. I will not labour the point too much but I am impressed Zoey Lily has made her mark already and has the skills to create a song and make sure it sounds how she wants it to. What I would like to see, when she gets to an album or E.P., is continue that singular vision as it will send out a message to new artists who feel they are unable to produce or do anything as good. Of course, with Zoey Lily, she has been involved with music since childhood so it is only natural she’d have those talents encoded and tattooed in her mind. One can hear that spirit, knowledge and authority when you hear her song, Last Goodbye. It is a personal and stunning song from an artist who continues to grow and impress.

I wanted to address unsigned artists and those who go it alone. It might sound like Zoey Lily is a solitary charterer who only wants to work on her own stuff – not allowing anyone else in. Rather than farm out duties to countless people and have to negotiate with various bodies; she is free to make music how she wants and not have to compromise. There is a different ethical consideration when you consider labels. Being unsigned has some drawbacks and problems. It can be hard raising money and promotional clout to get songs out into the ether and reach big stations/sources. A label can guide you through the process and they have the expertise to put music in the right hands and provide all the guidance you need. If you are with a label with a big stable; they will be able to put the music in the vision of radio stations, journalists and T.V. producers. It will be easier to get that attention and appreciation. One can list all the good things about having a deal and signing up with someone. Many find, however, there are more benefits being alone. Whilst you do not have the capital flow and the business minds able to guide the artist; there is not the constant promotion and pushing that means the music gets out there and is heard. The benefits of being unsigned are an artist can take control and do what they need to with their songs. They do not have to compromise when it comes to fees and have to split royalties; they can produce and write anything they want – a label can often direct an artist’s sound and career direction – and release material when they see fit. It may mean less money comes their way – the artist needs to work harder to get revenue - but there is more creative freedom and mobility.

I feel Zoey Lily will get a lot of label attention and people will flock her way. I can see some rather prominent labels throwing offers her way and, when that day comes, I hope she makes the right decision. It is hard knowing who to trust and whether you should take a deal. The way she is producing and releasing music is working right now. As her stock rises and the demand come in; she might not be able to field every aspect of work and have the time to perform. It is down to her but, regarding the next year or so; E.P.s and albums will come to her mind. Zoey Lily will want to tour internationally and she’ll be in a position to extend her scope around the U.K. At this very moment, the songwriter is producing some incredible music and doing things how she needs to. I wonder whether Zoey Lily will look at a P.R. label to help with the promotional side of things and pushing her music out to blogs. I know a lot of artists who do not have a label but have a promotional agency that can assist with putting the music into the ether and providing opportunities. It is an interesting ethical and financial decision when you think of a label and what it can do. There is no doubt the young artist will continue to grow and more demand will come her way. There will be those radio appearances and gigs requests from around the world. I wonder whether she will be able to juggle all the responsibilities of recording and releasing music with touring. If I were her; I would remain unsigned for now but, with new releases, keep my mind open and study those labels that would be good for her. She need not sign but, if she has a name in mind, she can share her music with them and that would open up negotiations.

Pop music has changed the past few years and is taking more prominence. Artists are becoming bolder and more eclectic; there is a leaning towards more personal and deeper songs – not as beholden to commercial sounds and something empty. A lot of Pop artists are learning instruments and concentrating on musicianship. There has been a gradual rise in the quality – even if there are some rather ropey artists around – and female artists like Billie Eilish and Sigrid represent the new breed. They may not play themselves but the writing and performances are a lot more mature and nuanced than you’d expect. When I was growing up; so much of what was being put out was catchy and inane. There were hooks coming out of all corners but I never really felt the messages being sung were that evocative or original. Maybe that is a way for music to remain and inspire: providing something with a catchy chorus and easy to remember. We still do have that sort of Pop but more and more new artists are turning the pen to their diaries and writing about their personal experiences. This can lead to some rather emotional releases that make you think (rather than dance). I have seen Pop change and the face of modern music has shifted. Some might argue there are fewer long-lasting artists and songs are not as strong as they were. Others contest young artists are working more independently and not reliant on swathes of producers; they are more concerned with meaningful songs and less bothered about parroting what labels want them to sing about. Zoey Lily is one of those people who fits alongside your Sigrid-type artists and has that sort of sound. There is youthfulness and vibrancy but, listen closely, and the subject matter has older bones and a ready brain. The words are more striking and mature than you would expect from someone so young. What impresses me is Zoey Lily manages to link with that of-the-moment Pop sound but not repeat other artists and mirror their music.

Listen to the vocal of Zoey Lily and there is that similar and popular sound. The notes are deeper and dark at time; there is a slight American affectation and the performance is solid and varied. You get a lot of colour and passion coming through; that mixes with tender moments and the resultant brew is a rather mesmeric and interesting experience. I wonder where she will head from here and whether her sound will alter that much. Zoey Lily has created something great that is speaking to her fans and recruiting new followers in. I can hear how she has grown on Last Goodbye and how confident the music is. You would not imagine this is an artist who has only been recording sounds for a short time. The Hackney-based, French-raised artist has been involved with music since she was a child. At the age of thirteen, she began playing the piano and got the songwriting bug. By seventeen, she was drawn to her dad’s acoustic guitar and picked up another talent. She was split between the rush of London and the rural pleasures of Les Mayons (France). This mixed and diverse upbringing goes into her music and touring. Her dad is a live music agent and her mum is a fashion designer. You can tell all of that D.N.A. is in her blood and it is no wonder Zoey Lily decided to get into music. She has a great contact/help in her dad and it is obvious his musical experience has made a big impact. I wonder what music she grew up around and whether she’s more inspired by modern Pop artists. One can hear a mix of older Folk and Pop with Electronic artists from this day. It is an intriguing concoction that seems familiar and accessible but is definitely from the unique mind of Zoey Lily. I am interested seeing where she goes from here and what the young songwriter can come up with.

There is softness and haunting opening that highlights the voice and the power it holds. The production is quite basic as to allow the natural tones to shine and resonate. Piano is there from the start and the notes are tender and pure. Before the vocal started; we hear Zoey Lily sort of sit down as it were and get the recording started (saying “Okay?” as if to signal the off). The performance has a sense of passion and intensity that does not lead to a suffocating and hard-to-love song. The way she delivers the words means every syllable strikes and there is so much emotion put in. Even though the song is, as the start, a little affected and harrowed; you are compelled to dive in and walk alongside the heroine. She is not going to beg the man to stay and compromise at all. It seems things have taken a turn for the worse and the breakup has left its mark. The composition relies on that piano and the way it cuts through the song. There are suggestions of beats and percussion but the piano is king and in the foreground. Our heroine is investigating the way she has acted post-breakup and how she has handled things. You get a sense of self-destruction and someone who is spiralling away. She implores the sweetheart not to hold on to her heart and step away. Maybe it has been a hard realisation and things have been a bit too severe. I am in the position where I see a young woman who has been involved deeply and was not prepared for what has happened. The guy, it seems, walked away and I am not sure whether he is the culpable party. One can hear Zoey Lily’s command and personality come through. Although, technically, Last Goodbye is ‘co-produced’ by Zoey Lily; she takes care of most of the duties and the song is as much her voice as anyone else’s – the lion’s share of the production and engineering is her.

The song continues to grip and keep you in with its emotional outpouring and confessions. There is that sense of weight and being tied by the stone of heartache. You get a sense of optimism and energy, oddly, as the song goes on. Piano steps back and the beats and electronics take more of a role. The opening is graceful and has that tender and controlled head. Our heroine was in the shadows and talking in quieter tones. The track then moves into new territory and the beats get sterner and more heated. The percussive notes scuttle and vibrate; the electronics echo and work in the back to create a mood that is quite hurt and scarred. What one notices is an opening and signs of hope. The song gets hotter and more energised – never too much… - and the heroine is looking to better things. You get signs things are on the up and she needs space at the very least. Vocally, things start to lift and I can hear a slight lessening of the pressure. Our heroine hums and there is a strange sensuality in the delivery. Zoey Lily has one of those voices that will remind you of certain Pop artists but never too strongly. That balance of familiarly and unique edge gives the song its stripes and compels you to reinvestigate. The story continues and it seems there is no way back for the duo. They have done all they can and things have ended. I am not sure whether both have blame or whether it is more one-sided. What I do know is the heroine has been impacted by the break and she is looking for some time away to reflect. I noted how the song contains energy and upbeat in addition to the sadness and pain. Towards the end, you get a sense the breakup is for the best and things will work out for Zoey Lily. She is looking for safety and a happier climb. You can appreciate the fact she needs to vent and get everything out there but I know there will be an improvement and brighter days. In terms of the composition; it gets brighter and there is light coming through. Last Goodbye is a song that takes a few listens through before all the strands and ideas really sink into the mind. It is a wonderful and emotional offering from a performer who naturally fits into modern Pop and knows what the public needs. She has not compromised that knowledge and ensures the song is personal and very much from her own heart. I can see more material coming from the songwriter and a very busy future ahead of her. In a music scene where there are a lot of artists doing the same thing; Zoey Lily is distinguishing herself and keen to mix things up. It is a beautiful and memorable song from the talented young artist.

Zoey Lily has a busy time ahead and will be keen to get Last Goodbye out to the people. I am not sure what she has planned regarding gigs but I am sure there are London dates coming. Keeping updated on her social media channels and the songwriter will update her fans. As summer draws closer; we will see Zoey Lily put herself out there more and that can result in more material. I am excited seeing what she can come up with and whether an E.P. is her next step. So far, she has made big steps and developed her sound. Each release sees new joys and elements come into the mix. You cannot deny she is among the more arresting and talented artists around. She takes care of her music and is someone who knows what each song should sound like. You get a personal and strong offering that stays in the mind and gets you moving. Last Goodbye has personal struggles but there is hope. Rather than write something too downbeat or hard; one experiences a blend of introspection and strength. The songwriter has produced something fresh and alive; it moves and strikes when you least expect it. It is a song perfectly suited for the warming weather and designed to get bigger crowds moving. I know there will be demands from festivals and the London-based artist will have a busy summer. Zoey Lily spends a lot of time on her music and the sheer energy she puts in is to be commended. The rewards will come and things will get even better for her. The Pop market is a packed and expansive one that is changing its face and producing some genuine stars. Zoey Lily is compelled by what’s happening out there and wants to add her own voice. She is doing that with aplomb and I am excited to see where she goes and what her next move is. Kudos to a spirited and stunning songwriter who is doing something new and turning heads at the moment. She is still young and there will be lessons along the way. Zoey Lily knows the challenges ahead of her and she will handle everything with grace and strength. Last Goodbye shows she is up for the hurdles and can tackle anything that comes her way. It is a striking song from a multi-talented artist…

PEOPLE need to get behind.

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Follow Zoey Lily

Official:

http://mezoeylily.com/

Twitter:

https://twitter.com/mezoeylily

Instagram:

https://www.instagram.com/mezoeylily/

Facebook:

https://www.facebook.com/mezoeylily

Spotify:

https://open.spotify.com/artist/0LazfGmIM2fG2g9Xg3ZLWA

SoundCloud:

https://soundcloud.com/zoeylily

BandCamp:

https://zoeylily.bandcamp.com/releases

FEATURE: A Big, Beautiful Aberration? How the Return of the Legendary, Era-Defining Band Is Dividing the Internet

FEATURE:

 

A Big, Beautiful Aberration?

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 PHOTO CREDIT: Rex 

How the Return of the Legendary, Era-Defining Band Is Dividing the Internet

__________

IF one were to compile a list…

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PHOTO CREDIT: Anders Hanser/Premium Rockshot 

of the unlikeliest eventualities and happenings; you’d probably put the resurrection of King Richard III above the news we heard this week: ABBA are reforming, it seems! Whilst some have mooted this might be a full-on reunion and return. It has been thirty-five years since the band split and recorded music – I was born in 1983 and, as such discovered the Swedish group retroactively. The band claimed nine number-one hits in the U.K. from 1974 and 1980 and are (rightfully) regarded as one of the finest Pop bands we have ever seen. Maybe, I guess, The Beatles have enjoyed better success and popularity – ABBA have not done too badly for themselves! There have been repeated suggestions and rumours the group would record together – all refuted and dampened soon enough. This time, it is not a drill: one of the two new songs they are recording, I Still Have Faith in You, will be featured in a T.V. special this December. In a statement; the band had this to say:

The decision to go ahead with the exciting Abba avatar tour project had an unexpected consequence. We all felt that, after some 35 years, it could be fun to join forces again and go into the recording studio. So we did. And it was like time had stood still and we had only been away on a short holiday. An extremely joyful experience!

Björn Ulvaeus revealed the details and, with it, sent the Internet into hyperdrive! Although the band are recording new material and are ‘back’; it seems the extent of their reunion will be a little limited – they will appeal on a special (by NBC and BBC) as computer-generated avatars; they will be ‘de-aged’ to look like they did in 1979. It all seems a little peculiar, I guess: the thought of them not really being there takes a little away from the hype and excitement. Alexis Petredis, reacting to the news, looked at their legacy and how they managed to gain a lot of success after their breakup:

The first time around, Abba were not taken seriously as artists. The general critical consensus was summed up by a photo of legendary US rock writer Lester Bangs, wearing a T-shirt that read “Abba: the largest-selling group in the history of recorded music” and an expression on his face suggesting this was evidence of western civilisation’s imminent collapse.

In the years since they split up, however, their stock has rightly risen to a dizzying altitude. Björn Ulvaeus and Benny Andersson are regularly hailed as the greatest pop songwriting team of their era; the emotional depth and maturity of The Winner Takes It All – and indeed the personal psychodrama behind it – is pored over in a way it never was on release; their relatively overlooked final album, The Visitors, is acclaimed as a kind of Scandi-noir masterpiece. When the BBC made an Abba documentary a few years back, you got the feeling that rock critics and hip musicians alike were queuing up to sing their praises”.

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PHOTO CREDIT: Olle Lindeborg/AFP/Getty Images

Those are reluctant and dubious right now are considering what ABBA have provided us and how any new song cannot match the dizzying success and brilliance they reached in the 1970s and early-‘80s. You get this with every reformation and return: the artist will record new songs and they will be nothing like their best; it is pale and, whilst it is nice seeing them back; one wonders whether their music is best left in the past. Björn Ulvaeus and Benny Andersson have given the world such standards as Dancing Queen, Super Trouper and Waterloo – the list is long and impressive. I can understand why purists and loyal fans might not want to see ABBA 2.0. come into the world. There is no way ABBA’s newest song will be THAT good and it is unlikely we will see a full-blown return. They are performing these new songs but it is unlikely the group will continue to record and bring out more records. The members are comfortabl middle-age comfort and they are not the same engaging and wide-eyed band we saw back in the 1970s. Maybe their songwriters have retained their magic with melodies and harmonies: in 2018, when ABBA’s style of music has translated into other artists and mutated; they cannot realistically release material that lives in the past – they have said they have come of age and the new material is just that: it is an evolution of who they were.

I am seeing so many different comments from all ages and corners. If you had to conduct a poll of those who want ABBA to reform and those who fear their return; I would say it would be around fifty-fifty. Although you can claim a lot of their best material came in The Visitors – their final album, released in 1981 – that was thirty-seven years ago. Time has passed and the four members have not been writing and playing together. If ABBA’s news was they were recording new albums and going on a world tour; it would raise questions and some doubts – are they going to degrade their best days and spoil the genius?! The ‘good’ news is they only have limited material out there: a lasting and productive revolution is not a possibility. The other side of the debate have made a great point: any new material from ABBA is a great thing. The fact they have buried their differences and seem, on the surface, to be in a better place is good news. ABBA’s new material will encourage new listeners and the young to seek out the band and their illustrious back catalogue. Most people know about ABBA but the most passionate fans remember them from the first time around – or children of those who grew up with their music.

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PHOTO CREDIT: Getty Images

I am pleased they are coming back because it has created a positive vibe and flame on the Internet. It has given people real hope and something to bond over. We are all playing old ABBA number-ones and predicting what their new material will sound like. Few actually think it will be another Super Trouper and take the world by storm. Things have moved on and music has moved to a place where ABBA cannot exist and influence the same way they did in their first incarnation. The sheer attention and ceremony their T.V. appearance will be given will change the music world and bring us all closer to one another. If we do not put too much stock in their new music and expect a Second Coming then few will be disappointed. It will be strange hearing ABBA on record so long after they split. I can understand those who predict lukewarm material and wonder whether that will dent the brilliant music ABBA have given the world. The fact so many people are talking about them and checking out their old music is the best result one could hope for. I know ABBA will now get into the hands of new generations and it will inspire other musicians to up their game and aim as high as the Swedish group. One cannot make any decelerations and arrive at conclusions until we have heard I Still Have Faith in You. I am optimistic the group will release a song that gets into the head and still retains a lot of their bygone magic. I wonder, when they have appeared on T.V., they will discuss a full-time return and make more music. There are naysayers out there that raise their eyebrows: I, for one, would love to see ABBA reform and see…

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PHOTO CREDIT: Getty Images

WHETHER it can reach the exhilarating peak of their glory days.

FEATURE: Age Against the Machine: Is the Dominance of Streaming a Sign the Music Industry Is Changing for the Better?

FEATURE:

 

Age Against the Machine

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ALL PHOTOS: Unsplash

Is the Dominance of Streaming a Sign the Music Industry Is Changing for the Better?

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TODAY is a day that finds me….

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reinvestigating a few areas I have stepped into before. I have been a little ambivalent towards the role streaming services are playing in the music industry. One of the reasons I am reversing my policy is the way it is rejuvenating labels and doing wonder for new musicians. Alongside the rise and takeover of streaming services; vinyl is still holding strong and we have not completely lost out affection for physical music. I will bring in a couple of articles that look at streaming and how the market is changing. Another reason why I have been imperious when faced with the sea of digital music is the way one forms memories. I do not feel I would have such a vivid and undying attachment to music were I raised through the Internet. The nature of holding music and having something tangible has produced sentient memories and a life-long obsession with the form. Whilst I believe there will be fewer diehard music fans in years to come – who have the same memories and broad tastes – I will concede there are obvious advantages when looking at streaming services. Smooth out issues around paying artists (some, in the past, have not compensated fairly) and it means we are able to give a real market to new artists. Look back a few years ago and it would not have been possible to provide opportunities to unsigned acts.

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The only way their music could make its way into the public forum was, well…I am not sure it would have been possible. Now, any artist can get their sounds into the world and earn money. In 2018; streaming revenue and profit have overtaken physical sales – we are spending more on digital downloads than ever before. This is good news for the future of music. I am still nervous that, one day, we will say goodbye to the humble C.D. and see vinyl’s role in the world reduced. Can we really say that the streaming growth has dented music and meant that artists and labels are suffering?! I look back at an article from the end of 2016 and some clear facts come to mind

Five years ago, the demise of the music industry seemed almost inevitable. Recession, rampant piracy, falling CD sales and a fear that “kids just don’t buy music any more” had giant record labels, once oozing wealth, counting the pennies.

Yet 2016 has seen a reversal of fortune – and the industry’s saviour is not what many predicted. Profits from music streaming, first championed by Spotify and now offered by Apple and Amazon, have given some labels their largest surge in revenue in more than a decade.

At the beginning of December, one of the world’s biggest labels, Warner Music, announced revenues of $3.25bn (£2.66bn) this year – its highest in eight years. More significantly, $1bn of that was from streaming, more than double its download revenue and more than $100m more than its physical revenue.

The surge in profits is being seen across all the major labels. In the first half of 2016, streaming revenue in the US grew by 57% to $1.6bn, and worldwide digital revenues overtook those from physical sales for the first time in music industry history, mainly because of streaming. This year’s most-streamed artist was Drake, with 4.2bn streams”.

Maybe, in a way, streaming availability is helped keep physical sales afloat. You cannot contest that the reason why so many people are buying vinyl is that they can hear albums online! I have dug back into the crates of music and played a record like Tusk (Fleetwood Mac). It sounds good coming out of my speakers: it sounds even finer crackling from the turntable. I feel we are more informed as a consumer nowadays. When we only had radio and record shops; we often made our buying decisions based on the charts and what specific D.J.s deemed worthy of focus. Now, in a busy market; we all have more options available and a wider range of music at our feet. Radio plays a pivotal role in the way we buy music – streaming allows us all to become more investigative and curious about artists. I have a paid Spotify subscription and will happily continue that. I feel guilty streaming and accessing music for free: everyone should be made to pay a subscription so that artists are fairly remunerated. Is there, however, still issues around royalties and how much every artist gets? Following Spotify’s announcement to go private; I read a Rolling Stone article that raised some interesting points:

Spotify's plan to go public, filed last week, could generate $23 billion and make the world's biggest record labels hundreds of millions of dollars richer — but the Swedish streaming giant has yet to soothe grumbling and litigious artists and songwriters who say its royalty payments are unfairly low. "They rigged it so they don't pay the artist," David Crosby tells Rolling Stone. "I've lost half of my income because of these clever fellas. I used to make money off my records, but now I don't make any."

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Spotify's response to these types of criticisms has been the same for years: The service has paid more than $10 billion in royalties to artists, labels and publishers, according to its modified initial public offering, and the company has helped save the record business from online piracy. "Spotify was founded on the belief that music is universal and that streaming is a more robust and seamless access model that benefits both artists and music fans," reads the 260-page filing. Adds Jim Caparro, former president of Island Def Jam Records: "The winds of Spotify are blowing in the right direction for the music industry."

If Spotify's modified IPO generates anything close to $23 billion, Sony Entertainment, home of Beyoncé and Bruce Springsteen, could generate an estimated $1 billion-plus, and rivals such as Warner and Universal could make almost that much. All three major labels have pledged to share this windfall with their artists, but it's unclear how that will play out. "Nobody knows," says a source at a major label. "People say, 'Well, it's easy, you take the usage on the platform from the beginning of the service and you allocate it based on that.' But if Bruno Mars is driving the majority of recent usage, are you going to just write a huge check to Bruno Mars? This isn't easy stuff".

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I have looked at streaming and its rise in a simplistic manner: feeling access and availability is the most important factor. If you think about the words expressed above; are we seeing an unfair distribution of royalties? If millions stream a Bruno Mars song and very few do the same with a Thom Yorke solo track; does that mean we are encouraging a disparity and wage gap? It is only fair, I guess, a popular artist is paid fairly and they are allowed to benefit from their fans. What worries a lot of artists is the gulf we are seeing in terms of streaming rewards. Should we, instead, take a more balanced and equal stance? Instead of paying artists in terms of total downloads; cutting the cheque so that everyone gets the same amount might be better? It is clear the new wealth of sites like Spotify are hiding rats under the floorboards. I love that I can pay a subscription and have access to a whole world of music, present and past. One can never know whether artists are getting paid fairly and whether new artists are getting as much from it as they should. My experiences regarding feedback have been somewhat mixed. Many artists feel streaming services are a lifeline in the modern age. Gigs are harder to come by and many venues cannot afford to pay them – they might kick in for petrol but that is where the till starts to close.

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By having your music on a platform like Spotify – and pushing people towards it – that means you can guarantee a constant flow of cash. The actual reality is that no minor artist will get as much as they deserve. Reading another article from Rolling Stone and the boost and success of streaming services still is not at the level we should be seeing:

“…While streaming services have boosted music revenue to levels not seen in a decade, it remains 40 percent below peak levels, with digital and physical recorded music sales continuing to decrease. There was a 25 percent drop in digital downloads revenue, which came in at $1.3 billion in 2017. Although physical product revenue exceeded that of digital downloads for the first time since 2011, shipments of physical products declined by 4 percent to $1.5 billion”.

The argument complicates the good news we have been promised. It is true streaming is succeeding and major labels are flourishing; more and more artists are finding success and profit on Spotify – there are other streaming services available – and competition is forming. YouTube have announced they are going up against the likes of Spotify and iTunes. This recovery and success should be seen in pragmatic terms: the race is not over and it does not mean C.D.s and vinyl are a spent force. I feel, so long as we can maintain the success of streaming sites and ensure artists are paid fairly, we can all benefit.

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I do not feel vinyl will end its life and decline anytime soon – I hope C.D.s remain viable for many years to come. I have changed my mind regarding streaming because I feel it is benefitting music as a whole. More and more people are discovering artists they might not have otherwise had access to. It is providing homes for new musicians and ensuring older artists are kept alive and relevant. Radio does that too but, in an age where we are all more aimed at digital outlets; it is not a bad thing we are spending time there and being more curious. One of my reservations regarding streaming was the fear physical music would cease to be and we would feel less need to get out there and visit record shops. Keeping a balance and ensuring artists are not taking advantage of is the most important thing we need to be aware of. I am not completely happy by streaming taking such a hold but know it is the future of the industry. There are multiple benefits and we can get music more quickly and readily than ever before. Anything that means new artists can get their voices heard and raise money can only be a good thing. I will leave things there but wanted to explore both sides of the argument and see where music is heading. If all the bumps and rough edges can be smoothed out; if we study the problems and ensure there is a fair playing field and balanced market; I feel music as we know it is entering an exciting and prosperous stage…

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THAT will bring great music to more and more people.

FEATURE: The Mixing Desk: From Social Media to Sociability

FEATURE:

 

The Mixing Desk

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 ALL PHOTOS: Unsplash 

From Social Media to Sociability

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ACCORDING to Graham Coxon…

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in Blur’s hit, Coffee & TV; sociability, it seems, can be a tricky thing. I am in the position where most of my daily dealings are completed through the Internet. I do not get out to gigs a lot and feel a little disconnected from the outside world. It seems like an odd statement saying, given the people I contact and how much I do; to suggest I am not connected to people is a bit strange. We all get into the routine of social media and spending a lot of our day checking it out. How many of us ever get the chance to switch stuff off and get out into the world?! Many might spend a few nights a week chilling out – many have guilt at being away from their screens. Even when we go out; how many are checking their phones for texts and updates on social media?! It becomes a bit of a hook and crutch, I guess. I have written about social aspects of music and explored it through different lenses. From the difficulty of dating and finding like-minded others to the difficulty of getting out of the house and spending time away from music; we are all a little less sociable than the generation before. I cannot claim the Internet is solely responsible for that reality. Rent prices have gone up and many people do not have as much disposable income as they’d like.

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It is challenging balancing work and social time so that we do not neglect the former too much. Musicians are among the most deprived and hard-working in the world, I think. The pressure on their shoulders mean they do not get many hours to get out into the open and forget about things. I know dating and socialising are different things – many of us find the former much harder than the latter. I have pitched a way musicians could date similar-minded folks and shrug off all the pitfalls and heartache of the dating circuit. Having a drink and seeing a gig is a different thing, I know. Even that can be a bit of an obstacle for a lot of people. The more we get addicted to social media and the less time we spend away from the screens; the harder it becomes to adapt to a normal, more sociable life. I wonder whether we have all become too used to a social media way of life. Even the people I know in couples are getting out there less and meeting new people. Perhaps rising prices and a more expensive night out is leading many more to settle in with a box-set and ignore all that is out there. I am writing this piece because I have spent so much time writing on a laptop and have not really got out there and mingled. It is like being an outsider at school: sitting in the corner and watching others have all the fun. The same is true of many other creatives and musicians I know.

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The more we engross ourselves in an easier and lonelier existence; the harder it can get when we finally dispense with the distraction and see what is out there. It may sound a bit patronising but, as I suggested a few months back; we can design something for musicians and journalists that sort of ‘eases’ them back into society (that did sound a bit condescending!). Whether we establish a club or a music-themed night; it would be possible to get a lot of similar folks together in conversation. Most of us, in music, go to gigs to see people like us. There is not a lot of conversation when we go to gigs: we are there to see the artists and it can get pretty loud. If we go to bars and clubs; we go with friends and often stick to the same places. It is a lot safer and less stressful getting into habits and not pushing ourselves. What I worry is many of us are unhappier than we were and there is a rising issue around mental-health. Human contact is a good way of easing stress and distracting ourselves from all the strains and demands of the average day. Another problem we face concerns those who live outside of cities. A lot of towns do not have many bars and spaces where we can converse and gather. Cities can be quite daunting and it is hard seeing where we head to find those we can communicate with and like.

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I am hearing from a lot of musicians who dedicate their every spare moment to music. They do not want to give it up but, at the same time, feel there is very little opportunity to forget about their jobs and enjoy a night out. What, then, can we do to unite those who do not want to forget about music but still enjoy the pleasures of other people?! For those who want to date or find friends; there are few bespoke areas and avenues they can explore. I keep hearing about failed dates and many bemoaning the expensiveness of a night on the town. Maybe ‘The Mixing Desk’ would be a good name for a chain of, cafes/bars that cater to those who love music. You would have the benefit of being in a comfortable and communal church without all the nerves and annoyances of a crowded and bustling bar. There could be jukeboxes and gigs; a themed décor that mixes classic and nostalgic touches with the modern and fresh. Keeping prices low and the atmosphere accessible means everyone could go and socialise with people who think like them – make contacts and connections whilst enjoying some time to unwind. Even if there was not a bespoke and new venture like this; it is clear we all need to afford ourselves the chance to get away from the distraction of technology. I come back to that feeling of guilt and feeling rather lost if we give ourselves a night or two off.

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By offering a transition and space where musicians, writers and D.J.s can converse, conspire and flourish; it eases that sense of guilt and provides a perfect balance of work and socialisation. Maybe there are those out there happy to stay inside and commit themselves to work; others are okay with the patterns they have and the way they are living. I feel there is too much unhappiness and stress bubbling up. We get into the groove that social media is where it is at and that provides us with a real and worthy connection. That view and assumption is a falsehood: it cannot replace the benefits of real connection and bonding with another human being. So many people have work mounting up and, by the time they come home from work; they either have to think about the next day or, if they are a musician, gigs and plans around that take precedence. My entrepreneurial mind often spins out ideas and ventures that could turn into something good. I am one of those who shut the world away and gives little time to others in the world. That is not as a result of being aloof and closed-off: I find I have little energy when I am through doing all my writing. Who knows what will become of us if we all continue down the path we are walking.

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Things will get more expensive and we will all get busier and less relaxed. Although a special space is not strong enough to tackle every problem out there. The bottom line is that we all need to give ourselves some more time away from screens and get back in touch with the common man/woman. I am one of those who do not heed my own advice as much as I should. I am finding things getting rather hectic and do not have the motivation to get out into the world and give myself a break. I am not the only one who struggles to get out of that headspace. The more we disappear down the social media hole; the trickier it can be to get back into normal society. That may sound extreme but I wonder whether we start to lose conversation skills and confidence when we spend a lot of time online. Many people in music feel isolated and alone when they go for a night out. Maybe the people they speak to do not have common interests and it is hard negotiating when it comes to conversation. There are so many musicians and talented people who feel the same way about the world but are divided by the Internet. Let’s all give ourselves more credit and put down the digital distractions for a couple of nights. If one were to come up with a specialised music zone where it would house awaiting friends – or dates – and strip away anxieties; I feel that can only be a good thing. At the very least; we need to look at our lives and wonder whether we are as fulfilled, happy and outgoing as we can be – and many of us want to be. When that sort of question is posed, and we struggle for reasonable answers; a rather sobering and troubling answer comes to the fore: we are unable to get out of a rather limited and unhealthy routine. That can change, for sure. With a bit of resolve and necessary effort; all of us can commit to some social time and, when the effects are tabulated and highlighted; the results will be…

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RATHER pleasing indeed.

INTERVIEW: Paul Aiden

INTERVIEW:

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Paul Aiden

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MANY might recognise Paul Aiden

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as one half of the Dance duo, Chimes. I ask him what it is like releasing his solo single, Ticket 2 the Moon. It was inspired by the tragic shootings at Sandy Hook school (in the U.S.) back in 2012 – I ask Aiden whether enough is being done in the U.S. to control gun ownership/use.

He discusses his favourite musicians and the albums that mean a lot to him; where we can catch him on the road; whether there will be more material with Chimes – he shares with me a very special (and sobering) musical memory.

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Hi, Paul. How are you? How has your week been?

Not too bad. I’ve been busy putting the finishing touches on my third single - which will see the light of day in July. It’ll have real strings and a very small performance from my daughter, Flora (aged two). She sings with me on the harmonies right at the end of the song.

For those new to your music; can you introduce yourself, please?

Hi! I’m Paul Aiden. I write and perform with an acoustic guitar. Everything is very stripped-back and organic. I am also interested in making Electronic music, but all my own stuff is back to basics, self-written and produced (smiles).

Your debut solo single, Ticket 2 the Moon, is out. What is the story behind the song?

I wrote the first version of the song in the wake of the news (of the) terrible Sandy Hook school shooting in America six years ago, which left many very young children dead. It was kind of a way of processing it. It’s written in the style of Americana/Bluegrass. It goes down great, live!

I know there is anger towards lax gun laws. Is it distrusting seeing so many massacres occurring in the U.S.?! Do you think President Trump is doing enough?

It’s got totally out of control and one of the saddest things is people don't want their guns taken away from them because then they can’t protect themselves. It’s a ridiculous loop of stupidity.

Trump has not even come close to doing anything of merit towards the problem…

What has it been like transitioning from Dance duo Chimes and stepping out alone?

To be honest, it’s a little scary and less fun going it alone - but the great thing is, I can do both. Chimes and I have lots of releases scheduled this year. I played a fantastic solo show at Hoxton Square Bar & Kitchen last month and it was really rewarding.

The songs that went down the best were the protest songs, Ticket 2 the Moon and a new one about Brexit called I Don’t Want My Country Back. I also did a cover of Unchained Melody - from the 1960s - which I really enjoyed.

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Is there going to be more material coming this year?

Yes! My next single, It’s Over Now, is coming out next month and can’t wait for everyone to hear it. The video is also something to watch out for. Directed by Ali Ingle; it features a brilliant artist friend, who plays the cello on the track, called Michael G. Moore (M.G.M.). You should check him out too. Excited!

You have an impressive list of songwriting credits to your name. Has your eclectic experience made you stronger as a writer? Was it quite natural putting your debut single together?

Yes, definitely. But, what I’ve tried to do with this material is to be totally honest and everything I’m saying in these songs is 100% real. I’ve felt the buzz of having many tracks make the top-five, but I'm really excited about the possibility of one being just under my own name.

Which musicians did you grow up around? Who do you count as idols?

I have a lot of idols, mainly Prince, Stevie Wonder; Fiona Apple and Frank Ocean but artists that have directly influenced my writing would be The Beatles, Radiohead and, maybe, my dad, who also writes and plays the guitar.

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Do you have any gigs lined up? Where are you heading?

There are a few gigs in the works and maybe some festivals later in the year. I would absolutely love to take this music on the road.

What do you hope to achieve in 2018?

Run more, eat less; drink less, be happy and try not to go on my phone as much…

ALSO; I want more people to discover my music. I’m confident that, with each single, I will start to gather more attention. The music is totally natural and honest and I think, in a sea of Auto-Tune and beat matching, it will be a refreshing change.

Have you got a favourite memory from your time in music – the one that sticks in the mind?

Well. Just hearing the other day that, sadly, Avicii passed away brought back a very special memory…Avicii decided to play a song I wrote called Glowing in the Dark to 80,000 at the Tomorrowland festival. Seeing that footage was an incredible, proud moment.

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If you could select the three albums that mean the most to you; which would they be and why?

Simon and Garfunkel - Wednesday Morning, 3 A.M.

It’s the Folk duo at their most pure: one mixed to the left and the other to the right; glorious harmonies, recorded in two days…their first album.

Kanye West Yeezus

A staggeringly original masterpiece. The way Kanye suddenly stops songs in their tracks to bring in old samples at a completely different tempo shouldn't work - but it totally does.

Prince - Controversy

This album has it all: Punk, Rock; Funk, Soul; an amazing ballad. It's political, bold and risky - and all in eight songs. 1981 was a great year!

What advice would you give to new artists coming through?

Turn back now; it’s a nightmare (winks).

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 IN THIS PHOTO: FLYTE

Are there any new artists you recommend we check out?

I really like the band FLYTE and was hugely impressed their album. Also, the Aussie artist Sarah Blasko is one of my wife’s all-time favourites.

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IN THIS PHOTO: Sarah Blasko/PHOTO CREDIT: Kylie Coutts

Do you get much time to chill away from music? How do you unwind?

I love watching Netflix and listening to vinyl: I have a pretty big collection that is growing a little too fast.

Finally, and for being a good sport; you can choose a song and I’ll play it here (not any of your music - I will do that).

Thanks...this was fun.

Kimbra - Version of Me

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Follow Paul Aiden

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INTERVIEW: Hydrocele

INTERVIEW:

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Hydrocele

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I am a little reluctant featuring Pop acts…

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because there are those that dip into the mainstream and do not produce anything appealing or credible. That is a risk one takes as a journalist, I guess! Luckily; Hydrocele are a band who stand apart and mix gritty Rock and pulsation with something alluding to the mainstream. I have been chatting with them about their new track, What You Looking At? and what its story is;  how the guys got together; whether there is more material coming – they talk about upcoming gigs.

I ask the band whether they get time to disconnect away from music and what it was like working with producer Pete Dowsett on their latest track; whether they have a particularly fond memory from their time in music – the guys each select an album that means a lot to them.

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Hi, guys. For those new to your work; can you introduce yourselves, please?

We are Hydrocele. Freddie (Vocals), Neemah (guitar); Ian (drums) and, we think, the guy over there with the bass is called Jonny.

Can you reveal the story behind What You Looking At?

What You Looking At? was written by Freddie and a best mate, Ash, just jamming riffs. The lyrics and melody came fast after that. It was written/directed at a girl in a previous relationship.  

What was it like working with producer Pete Dowsett?

Working with Pete Dowsett is an amazing rollercoaster of emotions, friendship and, most importantly, memes. He takes his FIFA seriously and never stops working - even on the toilet. George works very hard for Pete - getting lunch and coffees for everyone too!

How do you think your music has developed since your debut?

The Shapeshifter was a strong debut for us, but it’s fair to say that What You Looking At? has taken a different direction. The gritty Rock sound of the current single is definitely different to the glassy Pop sound in The Shapeshifter.

We are happy with both sounds - and definitely think the diversity is good for us!

Is there more material coming down the tracks?

It’s quite possible (smiles). The best way to know is to follow all our socials and look closely for announcements.

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How did the band get together in the first place?

We met at college, ACM (the Academy of Contemporary Music), and through a producer. We were all playing in different bands and kept crossing paths; we quickly realised we had similar tastes and ambitions in music but, most importantly, enjoyed working together. 

Your music has a Pop sound but it strays from the mainstream. Do you think it is important to have a unique take?

Obviously, Pop and Rock have certain elements that are pretty rigid and structured. We try to adhere to certain elements for our music to have a mainstream appeal, but we also want our music to have longevity. We want to showcase our skill and the years of practice we have put into our respective crafts.

Music wouldn’t be what it is without the emotion that this incorporates. We think that both are very important. Listening to music produced now is crucial to staying relevant but keeping in touch with your influences is just as beneficial. As we are seeing now with a lot of Pop tunes; sometimes you have to go back to go forward.

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Who do you all count as influences?

As a band, we have a very diverse range of influences. Although we overlap in a lot of areas, we each have influences that explore very different corners of the musical universe: Mac DeMarco, The Smiths; Nothing But Thieves, Gregory Porter; Slaves, The Strokes; Foals, Eric Clapton; Stevie Ray Vaughan and Olatunji are but a few examples.

Do you have any gigs coming up?

Yeah! We have a really cool set of gigs coming up supporting a really cool band called OMYO. We will be supporting them at the O2 Academy Islington and the O2 Academy2 Oxford on 31st May and 2nd June respectively.

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If you each had to select the one album that means the most to you; which would they be?

Freddie: Jet - Get Born

Neemah: Stevie Ray Vaughan - Instep

Ian: Michael Jackson - Thriller 

Jonny: Harry Styles - Harry Styles

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What do you hope to achieve in 2018?

There is a huge amount we want to achieve in 2018! After getting a taste of the big crowds at our KOKO gig, we would love to play places like that more regularly and have more people hear our music. 

What is it like getting on stage and performing to the people? What is your favourite memory from music?

Getting on stage with your mates and getting a crowd going with the power of your music always makes the best memories, however; if we had to pick one it would be the time at a post-gig McDonald’s that Jonny managed to get a Big Tasty, right slap-bang in the middle of his back without realising.

To this day, we still don’t know how it happened…

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Can you offer some advice to new songwriters?

The best piece of advice for new artists is to keep at it...

Give it your 100%. Take calculated risks. Never give up: it’s so easy to see the musicians at the top of their game and think that it’s impossible to get there, but you don’t see the years and years of hard work that’s been put in to get there in the first place. You have to create your own luck.

Which new artists should we look out for?

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IN THIS PHOTO: Zävodi/PHOTO CREDIT: Szigligeti Balázs

We all listen to very different music in our spare time; finding new artists every day that inspire us. A couple to look out for would be Hungarian producer, Zävodi and Alt. Rock band, New Volume.

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IN THIS PHOTO: New Volume

How do you guys unwind away from music?

We all have our own hobbies that we like to do outside of the band. Ian is actually in the top-ten worldwide players for World of Tanks and Neemah is doing his pilot’s license. Jonny is an aspiring painter and Freddie only knows music.

Finally, and for being good sports; you can each select a song to end on...

Freddie: The Greatest by Zävodi

Neemah: Eric Clapton - Behind the Mask

Ian: Lettuce - LettSanity

Jonny: Fit But You Know It - The Streets

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