So Young Issue Forty-Two

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Issue Forty-Two

Also inside: Shame High. O. Wombo Hello Mary Echo Northstar Mary In The Junkyard English Teacher Robbie & Mona THUS LOVE

Heartworms


28.04 - London. UK

TROXY


In our first issue of 2023 we welcome London’s Heartworms back to So Young, and this time on the cover. The speedy rise from the Speedy Wunderground signed band will have been hard to miss recently. Ahead of the release of their debut EP, we caught up with frontwoman, Jojo, about realising her manifestations and the Tik Tok men who can’t come to terms with a woman in military dress. Gearing up for album number three are South London’s Shame. ‘Food For Worms’ was born out of the imminent threat of a management imposed ‘new songs only’ show with no songs to play. We chat to Charlie Forbes and Josh Finnerty about working under pressure, old YouTube videos and getting things done in plenty of time…for once. In London, via Yorkshire, are English Teacher. Following two very sold out London headline shows, we caught up with the band to chat about their recent work with Dan Carey, creating their own TV skits and their hopes for the debut album. Arriving in London from Ireland last year was Echo Northstar. After being hooked on recent single, ‘Silent Fears’ for waaay too long, we decided to reach out. In our conversation we work out who Echo really is and gather advice on how to be in the know and independent all at once. Mary In The Junkyard are playing a show a week, maybe more, unlikely to be less, and the rooms are filling. Despite their favourite show being the one which was empty (due to train strikes), we caught them after soundcheck, ahead of a packed out performance, to find out how they came to be and who’s responsible for the on stage knitwear!

Bristol’s Robbie & Mona will release ‘Tusky’, the follow up album to debut, ‘EW’, in March. They’ve collaborated with the likes of Bingo Fury for this one and even let the film, Bad Boys have an influence. We discuss that and more inside. A duo. A baritone saxophone and a set of drums. Plus eighteen pedals. That’s the starting point for new Speedy Wunderground singing, O.. How that works is a lot to unpack and we do just that. Issue Forty-Two heads over to the USA for its remaining features. New Jersey’s High. talk us through their wall of noise shoegaze, with a hint of mild pop. And in Brooklyn, Hello Mary tell us about how lockdown removed the noise and how they sit somewhere between Elliott Smith and Sonic Youth. Brattleboro, Vermont is home to THUS LOVE but they’re currently in the UK touring. Ahead of a very packed show at the Sebright Arms, we discuss them being a queer band, how they built their own studio and lockdown cooking. To finish us off are Louisville’s Wombo. Their brand of Psychedelic Post-Punk has had us excited for some months now and the news of their imminent arrival on our shores is the best news. We give them a tarot reading via zoom. We’ve written about Tatjana Rüegsegger’s incredible, immersive project, ‘Brexit Bedrooms’ and more recently it was her photos of Lime Garden that adorned the cover of issue 41. We thought we’d dig a little deeper into the Swiss photographer’s work and process.

3 High. Bomber

38 O. OGO

8 Heartworms A Comforting Notion

41 Tatjana Rüegsegger A Student of Rock ‘n’ Roll

14 Shame Food For Worms

43 Robbie & Mona Tusky

19 Echo Northstar silent fears

48 THUS LOVE Memorial

26 English Teacher Song About Love

53 Mary In The Junkyard Top to tail, head to toe

33 Wombo Fairy Rust

58 Hello Mary Spiral


New Jersey’s High. are a band who’ve been on our radar

C: It’s a bit of a blanket term now. It used to be super

a while. A gorgeous melding of lyrical consciousness and

niche, I’d say it’s less so now. It’s like calling a band

instrumental dynamism, the quartet, formed of guitarist /

“Indie-Rock” – it could mean anything. A lot of bands

vocalist Christian Castan, bassist / vocalist Bridget Bakie,

are doing loads of fuzzy guitars, and experimenting with

drummer Jack Miller and Danny Zavala on bass have

guitar pedals.

gathered all fuzzed-up-forces to join the new-age league of contemporary Shoegaze.

Jack: You can usually tell by the band name if they’re a Shoegaze act.

Having just released latest single ‘Bomber’ off of their forthcoming debut EP, and following the announcement

‘High.’...

of their attendance at SXSW Music Festival in Austin this March, High. are on a no-stops trip to somewhere

B: Haha yeah... There is a wide range of bands- the term

undeniably special. A testimony to their friendship,

does make sense. There are some that are more noise

musicianship, and effortless ability to shift a genre built

leaning... others a bit more electronic... but it has all fallen

on adolescent-angst, into an age-less, boundaryless, and

into one.

environmentally unrestrained demonstration of classic It’s similar here in the UK. South London in particular,

escapism.

there’s a big ‘Post-Punk’ revival that’s been happening for years. It has become a media term- or a way to

Christian: What time is it where you are?

describe something that would’ve inherently started off It’s midnight! I’ve had a lot of coffee so this might get

indefinable.

weird. Can I just start off by saying how big a fan I am of you guys! Shoegaze wasn’t really a genre I grew up

What I find really interesting in particular, is these

with- I’m twenty-four now, so it’s cool to have all these

blanket terms tend to be directed towards scenes

contemporary acts to fall in love with. I don’t know

of adolescence. The kind of music you’d access

what the landscape is like in the States as much, but I

when you’re in your teens, or early twenties- those

feel like in the UK there’s a definite Shoegaze revival

developmental years. But there’s a timelessness to that

taking place.

too.

Bridget: We’re twenty-four too. I feel like a lot of people

C: Definitely. But then you also get those old music nerds

I know are getting into Shoegaze specifically. There’re so

who hear our songs slightly differently. Some people are

many new bands it’s not really a classic genre – it’s like a

so into it they break it down into ways I’ve never known-

classic and modern genre now.

which is when it becomes less about adolescence, and more about timelessness.

As far as where we live... there’s a lot of Shoegaze bands in Philly, which is just south of us. Like an hour and a half away.

3

Words by Al Mills, illustration by Kim Blue



B: Yeah that’s also true. It’s surprising how many older

B: I like to listen to music on my way to work and just

people who were kids in the 90’s who are really into us.

imagine playing.

We played a show locally and this older guy came with his son- who was maybe around fifteen. We thought he’d

J: It’s kinda trippy when we’re making music, you have

came because his son wanted to see us... but he’d actually

to listen to yourself so much throughout the various takes

just brought his son with him.

and mixes. I don’t listen to other music in that way.

Fifteen is such a formative age to be introduced to

B: I don’t listen to our songs just to listen to them, but

music – especially live music. My dad was really

I’ll listen to them mixed with other songs and try and

good at taking me to gigs early on. It’s definitely our

imagine it’s not mine. I’ll try and remove myself from the

primary source of communication.

memories and imagery associated with my own music, to gauge a better understanding of how the songs sound. I

Danny: It’s a great medium for that; people connecting to

love doing that.

each-other. A lot of good things happen through music in general.

D: It’s cool to be proud of something you’ve made. These are our first few songs. It’s a weird feeling, and so new.

B: My parents never really took me to shows... but I do

The band isn’t even a year old.

feel like the CDs they had in my house are the foundation of the music I started playing. There’s something about

B: This is the first band I’ve been in where the music

getting your parents CDs when you’re really young. I

hasn’t existed before the band. I’ve joined bands where

remember getting my dad’s ACDC CDs and that was some

I’ve loved their music, and I know what it feels like to

of the first stuff I played music to. It’s nothing like what

listen to their music and not be in the band as I’ve seen

I play now... but that energy you’re first inspired by does

them play. But I’ve never seen us play. I’ll see a live video

stick with you.

and think “oh shit is that what we look like”? It’s crazy.

It’s such an indulgent experience as well. Especially

C: Shoegaze lends itself to these very emotional peaks and

when it’s a physical product.

soundscapes that are so big they give you an out of body experience.

J: I love CDs. They’re still so relevant- I can play them in my car.

I can sense that. I think something you guys capture so beautifully is extremities. You have these big walls of

Barely anyone I know drives.

instrumental, abstract sound, and then you partner it with deeply human, lyrical narratives. It’s surreal and

C: Ahhh you’re missing out! New Jersey is all highways

relatable at the same time.

so you have to drive so much. But it’s nice because you can listen to music- it’s the only time I have for myself.

B: For me the instrumentals tend to really follow the lyrics. I think about the lyrics a lot- how the words sound.

That picture of music sound-tracking a highway, it’s such a universal experience. Even as someone who

J: When songs start we’re all trying to figure out our own

doesn’t drive and has never been to New Jersey. I can

parts- and then through that process we’ll start listening to

visualise that experience so viscerally. Do you listen to

each-other. It’s a very collaborative experience.

your own music when travelling? C: I listen to it on repeat.

5

High.


C: We focus a lot on the melody- I think they’re exciting to lean into when playing live. And having a mild popy-ness which helps with the listenability of the songs. It might add a bit more substance. B: Rhythm comes naturally to all of us. Christian and I are really inspired by goth and new-wave beats, and Danny is into hardcore. It all falls into place. So do you write separately and then bring it all into one room? J: It’s all over the place. I joined the band later- there were demos on drum-machines, and I began by trying to mimic those. Some songs start with Christian having a lyric or a melody, and then we’ll all bring our individual parts to that. Sometimes they just come from jamming. B: We always start off practice with some sort of jam. There’s a great Lee Ranaldo interview where he talks about the “stigma of jamming” and how people often assume it’s all just hippie’s creating Grateful Dead style music. Everyone smoking loads of weed and coming together to create trippy music. He then flipped it and coined it “extrapolation music” – jumping off a place of exploration. There’s a freedom to explore, but there’s a landing point to it all and that has to be the music. All: That’s so good! C: That’s why Sonic Youth were so amazing live. They’re songs are literally written by playing together, putting everything down. They experimented so well. B: I could never just jam with another person. J: We also know each other so well at this point. It’s hard when you’re starting with a new group of people and you’re trying to get a feel for each other. We’re so used to each other’s playing we’re instinctively on the same page.

@herxblux

6



Only eight months ago, we sat down with Jojo,

Interestingly, donning Glengarry caps, berets and soldiers’

frontwoman of Heartworms, for her first So Young

jackets initially gave her an added layer of confidence

interview. With a handful of European shows and an

to navigate this landscape, yet now she no longer needs

imminent departure for SXSW under her belt, it’s taken

them. Heartworms is the world through Jojo’s eyes, and

less than a year for her goals to come true. The speed at

though this world may be bleak, it’s full of intrigue.

which she’s achieved these goals shares a trailblazing nature similar to the military aircrafts she has a well-

What’s happened in the past 8 months since we last

known fascination for. This interest is only one part of

spoke?

her identity – an identity explored and excavated on Heartworms’ upcoming debut EP ‘A Comforting Notion’.

Everything’s been happening so fast. I’ve had a lot of high expectations for my EP because I worked so hard on

The EP name appears ironic – ‘A Comforting Notion’

it. The way it’s going is how I imagined it in my head,

suggests warmth and love, maybe even inner peace.

so that’s amazing. Shocking but also like – ‘ah yes!’

Unsurprisingly, the comforting notion in question is

Experiencing Europe has been amazing. It’s strange but I

monochrome, angry and uncomfortable. For the first

love it. Playing with my close friends makes it even better.

time, the listener will be able to hear the full range of Jojo’s vocals – on top of her biting inflections about

Can you tell me a bit more about your band?

the degradation of mankind, she sings and screams with heavier, more cinematic production. Yet underneath this

Marko’s on guitar and he’s been there the longest. He

heaviness lies a vulnerability – an honesty and will to

makes everything brighter. Lizzie is my bestest friend and

grapple with difficult past decisions and present current

bassist. I can’t really explain, she’s like the world to me.

affairs. As she herself says, if you’re going to say

I put all my trust in her. Then there’s Gianluca on drums

something bold, say it with your chest, and make sure it

and Simone on synths. They joined at the same time and

comes from an authentic place.

are wonderful. We’re all very different but that works well.

Musical history is fraught with bands co-opting militaristic imagery for subversive purposes – The Clash,

Playing Europe was your goal last time we spoke!

The Sex Pistols, The Libertines, The Beatles – the list goes on. Yet, Jojo asks an important question. Does her

I know! And I also mentioned wanting to play the U.S.

gender play a part in any backlash she might receive for

which is also happening.

feigning interest in the military?

Words by Poppy Richler, illustration by Inês Viegas Oliveira

8


South by South West?

‘This wild man grows, this wild man pays, consistent dedication, to get a fucking wage! Peaceful protests, yes!’

Yep…I didn’t know that was going to happen.

All of that is about current events I’ve seen on the news, including what’s happening in Palestine. My lyrics often

The only song Heartworms had out at the time was

consist of things my brain has absorbed subconsciously.

‘What Can I Do.’ I remember you saying it didn’t

The song also partially stemmed from reading the

represent what Heartworms was currently working on.

Communist Manifesto. I wanted to write something poetic

The latter is the music that’s now being released. How

and political.

would you describe this difference? You write in a way that’s political but not overtly so. The production and the style of singing are different. I’ve

You’re getting across what you want to say without

managed to demonstrate my vocal skills. ‘What Can I Do’

shoving it in someone’s face.

was a naïve release. I had no idea what I was doing, but I knew I wanted it to be dark. The newer songs are a lot

Exactly. I’m sometimes afraid to say certain things

harder, there’s someone shouting at you.

because I may be wrong. I want to know what I’m talking about before I blurt it out. I say things about how I feel

It’s noticeably danceable, with elements of trip hop.

without making it obvious. Sometimes I have no idea what

Talking about the first release off your upcoming EP

I’m talking about and I’m a bit embarrassed if people say

‘Consistent Dedication’, the song is loosely about the

it’s weird or wrong.

ugliness of mankind. Would you say that since we last spoke mankind has declined even more?

Does Heartworms still provide a platform for you to explore different characters within yourself?

There’s always something around that makes mankind evil and disgusting. But there’s also hope. I don’t like

Definitely. When it comes to how I look, I’m forming now.

to always think things are bad. But due to personal

I’m stepping away from the Glenngary and military beret.

experiences, I wanted to have a way to express that

I’m softly launching more of a Sisters of Mercy, all gothic

ugliness whilst incorporating what’s going on in the world.

vibe. I enjoy these drags I have and I love dressing up. I think over time, maybe in the future, I’d do Heartworms

There’s an elongated scream running through your

in colour…soft burgundys and navys. To have Heartworms

most recent release ‘Retributions of An Awful Life’. Is

as a platform to do whatever I want to do or feel whatever

this at all related to a catharsis that music gives you?

I want to feel is so amazing. I’ve always wanted that and I’ve never been afraid to express myself. Even separate

I do have this feeling of chasing a certain satisfaction

from Heartworms, I’m always wearing crazy things. A lot

when the music is released and when I play it live. I feel

of artists would agree that it’s nice to have that.

like I always need to do more, make more. But I express this in many ways. I’d love to always write as darkly as

Before we move on, what’s the history of the Glengarry

possible. But sometimes I see myself writing something

hat?

quite hopeful. There may be elements of hope in the music I write, but it always comes down to a dark synth, lyric or

It’s a Scottish military hat. I found out about it when I

a darkness in the way it’s sung.

was doing a photoshoot at Neil Anderson’s house. He has loads of military artefacts laying around. In all my promo

The song ‘Consistent Dedication’ is like a call to

shots I’m wearing that hat. I love its history. This one

arms…

specifically has a 42nd star division badge. It’s aggressive, formal and classy all at the same time.

9

Heartworms


Talking about live performance, I read somewhere

There’s a lyric in retribution that hits me in the chest

about your fascination with Aldous Harding’s live

every time I sing it. “When you’re young, decisions aren’t

performance. She’s totally magnetic, yet makes you feel

that fun, I hear you running from fear you worry about.”

so uneasy.

Those lyrics stick with me because I’ve had to deal with that kind of thing since I was a kid. I always had to make

That’s exactly how I feel! I saw her play the Roundhouse.

big, adult decisions from a very young age. A lot of people

My friend Jay was saying how she’ll just stare at you

have probably had to do the same. I love that part of the

randomly, then pick up a mug and tap it. It was incredible,

song – it’s vulnerable but also aggressive and strong.

I can’t. She made me feel so uncomfortable but completely besotted with her. The way she performs and sings, such

Military is something you referred to a bit earlier, in

subtle movements and such a strange grin. When I went

terms of the Glengarry hat. When we last spoke, I got

away I thought, that’s how I want to make people feel.

the gist that your affinity for its aesthetic is linked to

That’s what I want to do – a bit of a stare but also a grin

creative control. Is that right?

so the audience know I’m having fun. I love history, world war history and aircrafts. I discovered Has the stare ever been broken?

myself when I was wearing military – a very heavy military jacket from a 6th division or something. I felt

No, not yet! I think if I saw someone I knew, then I would.

control – it was like a strong blanket. You’re completely

But the people I know are usually at the back. It’s the new

right – it was a form of control that helped me find that

people at the front who get it…

strength in me. It’s weird, before that military stuff I just wasn’t as honest or able to show my strength. But after I

Are there any specific characters you explored in this

started wearing military, I wasn’t afraid to say anything

EP?

or be anything. But now I can be like that without the military clothes, which is quite a beautiful thing.

The final song ‘24 hours’ is about having to get through secondary school. There was always systemic racism and

I find that interesting because the idea and aesthetic

bullying. I’d try to make myself look like my friends who

of military is very loaded. To pursue it so obviously

were white as fuck. They were completely different to

is quite bold. Have you ever had backlash because of

how I looked and I was just trying to get through a 24-

this?

hour day. When I perform that song, it takes me back to being…I guess quite naïve and vulnerable.

Yeah – a lot of people on Tik Tok. It’s a place with many people and many opinions. I have friends who are very

The character in ‘Retributions’ is similar to the one in

old men at the RAF museum in Hendon. They’ve seen

‘Consistent Dedication.’ No one will mess with this

how I dress and they’ve listened to my music. They like

character. It’s now or never, keep fucking going. The

it but they think ‘wow this is very rebellious’. But on

music video shows that sentiment clearly. I put myself in

Tik Tok, you get men saying that it’s a disgrace to wear a

a situation that made me feel uncomfortable, but there was

Glenngary hat in a music video. It’s not a disgrace – I’m

a voice inside me telling me to go for it. I admire people

not spitting on it or doing anything bad to it. I like to wear

who put themselves in horrible situations – it’s an art, it’s

it because I’m proud of how it looks.

beautiful. This EP is all of me – straight up, no faking it. I’ve got a few vulnerable characters, a few strong ones. That sounds like a fully rounded personality – no one can be 100% strength all the time. A lot of the best music reveals vulnerability.

@inesviegasoliveira

10


There’s a surrounding controversy, especially if you’re a woman wearing military. It’s a direct point for men who think they’re know it all’s. I understand people’s reservations, but at the same time, I’m not doing anything wrong to the uniform. If we think about other musicians – The Libertines wore the red jackets, The Clash wore berets. They’re almost all white men doing what they want. And they get looked up to! I kind of like that people think it’s a disgrace… Men being know it all’s…how unfamiliar? With artists like PJ Harvey who I know you’re a fan of, she’s a woman in control because she writes all her own music. If we think about this on a larger scale – engineering, touring culture etc. It’s still very male dominated. It’s annoying because men never have to answer these questions, but I am curious to know if you have any advice for navigating this frustrating landscape. Unfortunately, it’s going to happen. Always back yourself as being right. Without backlash it’s not as exciting is it? Fuck it, do what you want. We’re all going to die one day. There are so many things that will make you happy, so just make them happen. But be careful – don’t do anything really bad. Just do it…with good thought. Since you achieved the goals we talked about a mere eight months ago, do you want to voice any new ones? That makes me feel like I can do whatever I want if I work hard for it. My next goal would be to write a sick album and have Pitchfork write a review of it. Be on the cover of Rolling Stone. Support Interpol. I’ll manifest for sure. Last time you taught readers about the Boeing B-17 Flying Fortress…can you give readers another interesting fact or insight into the future of Heartworms? There’s something aircraft related that’s going to come with the EP release. Something to do with spitfires and Airfix… Apart from that, lots of shows, cool new outfits, and meeting new cool people who love Heartworms.

11

Heartworms




Is it helpful to put deadlines and time-restrictions on

Firstly, I caught up with a lethargic Charlie Forbes from

creative processes such as song writing? After all, we

his smoky bedroom in South London and then later

can’t be productive every hour of every day. Should we

joined by a suitably chaotic Josh Finerty in transit from

still write music when inspiration is hard to come by, just

Streatham to Clapham Junction.

because our work schedule says we must? Hey, how’s it going Charlie? Before speaking with Shame, I would probably have said no to both these questions. But maybe it’s helpful to have

Charlie: Not too bad, enjoying my time off! Last year was

a bit of time pressure to actually force us to think outside

full on, so I’m enjoying a slow start to 2023, lying in bed

the box, to stray from our comfort zones where we often

till 1 most days.

fall into the trap of repeating ourselves. As Shame keenly demonstrate, inspiration is something which needs to be

You all live together, right?

created, not something which comes to you spontaneously. The image of the thought-provoked philosopher is dead,

Charlie: Yeah, It’s the GOAT squad.

what we need now, in all walks of life, is action. No good sitting on your arse all day, just get up and get shit done.

I was over just before your second record came out.

A fitting motto for Shame’s pragmatic approach to their

There was a huge scramble for assets, and everything

third album ‘Food For Worms’, which encapsulates so

was pretty hectic, so I hung out with your housemate in

enthrallingly their thirst for creativity, and their unfailing

the garden talking about World of Warcraft for a few

ambition to cook up the most phenomenal record they

hours…

possibly can; what Steen calls the Lambo of Shame Charlie: That is the Streatham experience. We indulge in

records.

a lot of big fantasy board games which take like a day Having said all that, it becomes apparent through this

and a half to complete. It’s not my scene really, the others

interview that without a scope set for a new record, and

usually have to airlift in a few extras to help fill the space

with a bit of time to spare before the next worldwide tour,

in the dungeons.

some members of the band like to hibernate, as we all would, if our lives were as chaotic and relentless as life is

I would have thought they appear through some kind

in one of the greatest bands of the modern age at making

of portal, no?

our eardrums bleed. Yes, that was a Spinal Tap reference. Charlie: Or by parachute, yeah…

Words by Leo Lawton, illustration by Sergey Isakov

14


Queue Josh…

We’re lucky to have some really cool options now.

Josh: [Welcome aboard this Southern service calling at…]

Any good insults on the video live chat last night?

Hey guys how are we? Charlie: I was mostly just bullying Eddie, so wasn’t We were just talking about portals appearing at your

paying much attention to the insults. The live chats are

house in Streatham.

great though. At the end of the video when Thatcher was revealed the chat went mental! Then a robotic Osama

Charlie: You know, Josh, when people rock up to the

Bin Laden came out… Incredibly surprised the label had

house via portal? Quite invasive really.

nothing to say about that. To be fair, I don’t even think they’d seen it before it went live.

Josh: Yes, yes, I know very well. May I ask how that came into the conversation?

Josh: Super random to have Napoleon as the protagonist for the video. I think all the faces in the video are actual

[I explain album 2 asset scramble, World of Warcraft

historical figures who worked with Napoleon, apart

chat etc]

from Thatcher and Bin Laden, obviously. Although both may have cited him as an influence at some point, that

Charlie: The mere mention of trying to get assets together

wouldn’t surprise me. The beauty of someone else creating

for that second record puts me so firmly back in that covid

your video is that it’s just as much of a surprise to us as it

headspace. That was such a horrible time. ‘Drunk Tank

is for everyone watching the premiere.

Pink’ assets are possibly the most triggering set of words to hear.

How did you come across the artwork itself?

How’s it been this time around ‘asset’ wise?

Josh: We scouted out Marcel [Dzama] ourselves. We loved his style and knew it would suit the new songs. We sent

Charlie: Everything has come together so nicely on this

the music to him, and he drew out a few options.

campaign. We got ahead of stuff early, like the name, I can’t wait to see the real thing.

the artwork. We didn’t leave it all to the last minute, something we’ve done historically since the birth of Shame.

Charlie: Yeah, Steen was sent five copies, but I still haven’t seen mine yet! The record was finished in July,

Josh: [Almost inaudibly amongst a symphony of train

so it’s been a long time coming. Because this was the

horns] I agree!

first album that we’ve recorded live, there were plenty of pushbacks. It was great, but also really challenging.

I loved the video for ‘Six-Pack’. It’s throwing me

But that’s what you hear on the record, it really feels like

right back into our portal dialogue with its RuneScape

we’re all there playing together, because we are.

aesthetic. I found it super nostalgic. Josh: Most of our favourite album’s sound like you’re Josh: That was what we were going for! That merged with

there in the room. The early Modest Mouse records are a

the music video for ‘Californication’ - such a classic.

great example of that. When we went into the studio we passed on those reservations to Flood, our producer.

Charlie: We didn’t even get updates on the video’s progress; we just saw it when it was finished. With this record we have been much more specific about the kind of people that we want to take along the journey, whereas before we just let our label make all those decisions.

15

Shame


Charlie: Everyone has been telling us to do a live record,

What were the conditions which meant that you were

and initially it was daunting because it’s so hard to

struggling for material before then?

execute. Like, my perfect take could have been Josh’s shitty take. We were constantly finding ourselves back at

Josh: There were a bunch of different reasons. We had a

square one.

load of ideas, almost more than was fathomable. At that time, which was right in the middle of covid, nothing was

Josh: When there is the energy of the live show in the

certain, there wasn’t a tour to write for, an album deadline

recording studio, it’s massively picked apart because each

etc. Too much time, not enough direction…

take has the potential to go onto the record. When we play live, the music passes without judgement. That was a

Maybe you guys were getting a little complacent?

tricky adjustment. Josh: I wouldn’t call it complacency because we were all Charlie: We didn’t do anything to a click either, just to

still worried. There was an urgency to it, but none of us

replicate that live feel more.

were putting our foot down and saying that a track was finished. None of us wanted to tread on each other’s toes,

Josh: Yeah, that was great - our producer refused to use

but when the time restraint came in the form of two live

a click which was cool, he really understood the concept

shows set up by our management, we had to just get on

and fully ran with it.

with it and move on from one song to the next.

Charlie: Also, the songs we went into the studio with were

Those shows were at the Windmill, right? Is that venue

the least developed songs we’ve had before. There were

still at all relevant to you now as a band?

25 song ideas initially, which we tried. Some worked, some didn’t, and we ended up with 10 for the record.

Josh: It’s old news!

And they all came together through a couple live shows

Charlie: There’s this weird fetishization of the Windmill,

you did?

which is good in a way, I suppose... People have created this term, windmill-core. Pretty mental.

Charlie: Yeah, last year we found our own studio but for various reasons we couldn’t write. Then our management

Josh: There was a time when the Windmill was very valid

booked us to play a few low-key shows and told us we

for us, but once we’d released the first record, went on

needed to have two entirely new sets for each. We also

tour, we no longer saw the relevance. But it’s great that

went for a writers retreat in Rugby, a very average place.

there are so many bands now, and we’re just too old.

We managed to get five or six songs from the retreat, and the rest came together through merging scraps which we

Ok, enough of that then… Am I right in thinking

had previously.

there’s been a bit more freedom between the five of you in terms of switching instrumental roles within the band? Quite a nice way to neutralise the dynamic?

Josh: It was the pressure really. The fact that we had to come up with two new sets forced us to approach the writing process differently. Plus, we didn’t have time to

Charlie: Yeh, it was nice. Steen started fucking around

analyse the songs too much. Once something was passable

with guitars, writing vocals whilst playing, that sort of

as a song, we just said, ‘it’s done’ and moved onto the

thing.

next. We didn’t have that mentality of ‘this could always be better’. That attitude has never been conducive for us as a band to make an album with. You need to put a few constraints in the way which force you to move on.

@deonoise

16


Josh: Also, I got covid just before our writing retreat, so

Charlie: Your eyes practically didn’t open for the entirety

even switching personnel helped. Less people jumping

of the video Josh.

on ideas helped it flow, it’s good to take things away occasionally.

Please can I include this?

I feel that with ‘Orchid’, it’s much softer than any song

Josh: You can, its fine. There are so many interviews from

you’ve written before, like something has been taken

that time equally embarrassing for me, painful almost. Its

away. Should people expect a change of tempo in the

only ever me making a fucking idiot out of myself though,

live show?

the others get off lightly in comparison! I genuinely think it should be illegal to be video interviewed until you are

Josh: A few of the new tracks add extra considerations

at least 23.

when it comes to production value, so there’ll be a new level to step up to now. Regarding our energy on stage,

Charlie: That one is just too good though. The one I can’t

nothing is going to change there.

watch is the Pitchfork Over Under, not that I’ve watched it recently, but fuck, I know it’s bad. I’m afraid to open the

Charlie: We’ve been playing every song off the record live

memories.

anyway, so they already feel engrained in the set. We’re just excited for everyone to know them.

Josh: Yeah, in that one you and Sean slag off the Chilli Peppers which I’m still annoyed about!

Do you base your single choices on crowd reception? Charlie: I know! Why would I do that! Charlie: Not really. We just pick a ‘meal deal’ of slightly different sounding tracks.

Josh: Because dude, I wanna be friends with Flea.

Josh: The singles tend to be our favourites. Usually there’s

Charlie: Poor, poor form from me. I apologise to Flea.

unanimity within the band when it comes to choosing

Please put that in the article Leo, this is my official

singles as well which is helpful.

apology to Flea.

So, what’s the press schedule like for you guys? Have I

Josh: Yeah, Shame’s official stance is that we love the

caught you at a good time?

Chilli Peppers. You heard it here first. That’s the headline. In fact, put that at the top.

Josh: Yeah, for sure, you’ve caught us at a good time. Only If I can put a link to bands buy records just underneath.

Charlie: It hasn’t been savage for us. If you’d called up Steen and Sean who are in the middle of a 4-day European press trip they might have something different to say…

Josh: Fuck, fine.

Me and Josh are chillin’. Annoyingly we’re going to run out of time, and I Well, you’re having a ciggie in bed so can’t be too

wanted to throw some hinge prompts at you. I guess

difficult, eh?

we’ll have to wait.

On a bit of a nostalgia trip this morning I re-watched

Charlie: Well, I’m a black belt in respecting my peers.

your bands buy records video… Josh: Ah jesus… Lol I think we’d had five minutes sleep before then.

17

Shame



On a bitterly bright January afternoon, I met up with

Do you find that if you’ve had a rough few days then

Echo Northstar for a chat over half pints, and notebooks

writing is what you wanna do?

filled with the concepts and characters behind the project. Shadowed by a clairvoyant guide which goes by the name

Yeah I think so, there’s a relief at the end of my writing

of Echo, the artist has been spawn-trapped by labels and

process which’ll take me out of it.

‘industry fellas’ jonesing for their brand of breathy indie. The Irish via South-London artist has released a handful

I’ll keep my fingers crossed for you. What was the last

of cavernous singles so far; ’someone else’ is a bittersweet

concert you went to?

ode to what-ifs, and the hooks on ‘silent fears’ will marinate your brain for days on end. Yet, Echo Northstar

I saw The Cure in December, in Dublin. It was one of the

experiments with more than just the medium of three-and-

best gigs I ever went to.

a-half-minute singles. Venturing into ambient music on ‘someone else / distance / you are here / called you mine’,

I saw that your DJ sets seem to mostly be made up

and spinning influences from Crystal Castles to Dean

of 80’s indie (like The Cure and Siouxsie and the

Blunt in their DJ sets, the artist has put the time and effort

Banshees) and experimental electronic music. Are those

into world building which you’d normally expect from

genres hard to mix together?

a games designer. Atop of telegraph hill and under a sky bluer than January, they kindly unpacked the intricacies

I’m always trying things out, so it changes every time.

of Echo Northstar as a project, and how self promotion,

I tend to genre jump between tracks most of the time.

dreams, and innocence impact their creative process.

But it’s about finding that sound you think might have influenced another song twenty years later, and taking

Hey Echo Northstar, thank you for taking the time to

that chance. I used to do more sets back home before

sit down and chat. How’re you doing?

lockdown, but I’m planning to do some around here soon, I’d like to play Avalon Cafe.

I’ve actually had a bit of a rough few days, but I feel like Avalon Cafe’s a great venue. Have you been to Bunker

I’m kind of getting it over with.

in Deptford? January is awful, I hate it. Have you got any plans for the weekend to look forward to?

No I haven’t, is it an actual bunker?

There’s definitely a gig going on that I told people I’d go to and then have forgotten about… There’s a vague commitment for sure, but mainly I want to do as much writing as possible.

19

Words by Charlie Brown, illustration by Martha Verschaffel



It’s someone’s basement with a tin foil ceiling and a PA

I guess that’s what the start is for. Who would be in

in it. It’s weird but really fun. Have you got a favourite

your rap super group? You get three members, they

soundtrack or musical?

don’t have to be still active.

There’s one song off the Oliver! soundtrack called ‘Where

OK, probably Biggie, uh maybe… I know, Ol’ Dirty

Is Love?’ that’s one of my favourite songs, the melody

Bastard! And, uh, Yung Lean… you need a good Swedish

is just so beautiful. It’s all that stuff from those old

songwriter in there.

songwriting houses on Tin Pan Alley or whatever the hell. I also like ‘The Sound Of Music’, that’s got some good

Did you see that episode of ‘This is Pop’ on Swedish

ones.

songwriters? They talk about the Swedish word ‘Jantelagen’, it translates to ‘the rule of Jante’, but it

Great choices, I’ve always got a soft spot for The

basically means not boasting about your achievements.

Italian Job soundtrack. Am I right in thinking you

They talk about how humbleness is the reason behind

release your own music?

the success of Swedens musicians and producers.

Yeah, I’m independent at the moment. I do it all myself.

The one with Max Martin? That’s really interesting, like there’s a kind of stoicism there I guess. I feel like

What’s it like being your own label? Does it get

you have that in Ireland as well. If you do something

stressful?

in anyway good, and you promote it or feel good about yourself, everyone’s like ‘who does he think he is?! Some

Yeah definitely, but I’ve been in different systems before

fuckin’ loser on the dole.’

with other projects where you’re restricted in certain ways, so the novelty of freedom - although I’m sure I wont

Is that something that you’ve experienced, people

have this level of independence forever - is something I’m

almost dragging you down?

really enjoying right now. I heard a quote saying that the best things happen when musicians stay up late with other

Yeah definitely, you have to deprogram yourself from it.

musicians, but it’s great being able to have the space to

You do get that kind of conditioning, growing up in some

develop my own artistic output at the moment.

places. But you know, Ireland is beautiful, there are good things as well.

Can you tell me some more about those previous projects you mentioned?

I suppose it must take some sort of self reassurance. What do you normally have to remind yourself about?

There were a few bands back in Ireland, in Cork. And I had a Soundcloud I would make stuff on, and I once

I have to remind myself, I don’t know how this sounds

released a song with my sister as well.

but, about my inner child. How you are the exact same person as you once were, running around, freely. I don’t

Being an independent artist definitely has pros and

know how to put it, but I find it a nice thought.

cons, do you have any advice for others wanting to release their music without the help of a label?

What’s the difference between Echo Northstar and Echo as your companion, within the story and lore

Only boring, logistical advice; make sure you know

behind this project? Is that something you’re able to

all about your third party distributor, make sure you

put into words?

understand where the royalties lie, and that all your forms are filled out so you can get paid. Not that you’re going to

Hopefully. Or I can show you, I’ve got my notepad of

get paid much at the start.

drawings on me.

21

Echo Northstar


Readers, this is the point where I’m taking out my book of dreams and nightmares… I had a crazy dream this morning. This man with no top on tried to jump in my friends car and steal it. Had to grab him by the legs and scream into his ear to stop. Then I threw him off a pier onto a beach. Did you recognise this guy? I thought it was me, but it wasn’t. Anyway, this is a drawing of Echo, and he’s kind of like your inner child and kind of like your creator, and I’m Echo Northstar, the physical person. You know when you’re in a creative flow and you’re trying to grab onto an idea before it disappears, Echo as a character represents that. Did you ever play Legend of Zelda? There’s that little guy who follows Link around? It’s similar to that. Like an omnipresent being? How did the idea come about? Yeah. I did this thing a while ago on a flight home; they had a load of free newspapers and I drew a picture of myself, and I drew Echo floating above me. All the words from the newspaper were surrounding them both, and I’d circle individual words and make sentences, as if the drawings of Echo and I were having a conversation. What ended up happening was something along the lines of myself saying ‘Oh no, I’m feeling so down, I’m in a hole’, and Echo responded with this childlike positivity, but wisdom at the same time. Echo is clairvoyant, they can see what isn’t there, which kind of comforts me. Sorry if I’m rambling too much, but basically Echo is the metaphysical version of myself. Wow, well thanks for taking the time to chat. Is there more to come from you and Echo? Well, it’s funny you asked. I’m currently working on my debut EP, it’s called ‘Things I Wish I Could Say’. I have one song out already, ‘silent fears’, that’s going to be on it, and there’ll be three or four more tracks too. Great, when can we expect that to be out? Summer, but that’s a bit of a lie.

@marthaversch

22





In early conversations about English Teacher, there

Congratulations on ‘Song About Love’! I saw that you

was an influx of obscure portmanteaus and hyphenated

said the track couldn’t have happened under different

descriptors in a desperate attempt to label exactly what it

circumstances, what was it about working with Dan

is they bring to the table. Now, nearing two years since the

Carey and Speedy Wunderground that made you feel

release of ‘R&B’ and ‘Wallace’, it can be said that behind

that way?

the guessing game of categorisation is the excitement of ambiguity. English Teacher have an endearing habit of

Nick: Well we got there and started talking and then Dan

bending their sound just enough with each release to bring

was immediately like “let’s get into it”.

you something they haven’t before - a quality that makes pinpointing an exact genre hard, but also fantastically

Lewis: He only let us play it about three or four times, and

unnecessary.

then he was like, “don’t play it again now until we do the take”. We went into it blind.

Made up of Lily Fontaine (vocals/guitar/synth), Nicholas Eden (bass), Lewis Whiting (lead guitar) and Douglas

Lily: It was very different.

Frost (drums), English Teacher’s knack for playful yet poignant wordplay has rapidly lifted them into our eye-

Lewis: The added pressure helped too. There was so much

line. In celebration of their latest single, ‘Song About

space in the song because it’s a really simple composition,

Love’, English Teacher played a release show at Soho’s

but he filled out so much of that space, and during the take

Third Man Records and secured the penultimate slot at

when we were doing vocals [Dan] was like…

the birthday celebrations for The (mighty) Lexington. It was hard to ignore the rush of hands from every direction,

Nick: He was scheming.

pulling them this way and that for a picture or avid complimenting. That visceral excitement, considered

Lewis: …Yeah! He was almost playing as a fifth member,

alongside their scheduled appearances at the tastemaking

he was playing modular synth. It was coming back out at

showcases SXSW and The Great Escape, is casting 2023

us while we were doing the take too so we could hear it,

in a promising light. With hopes of a debut album and

I’ve never had that extra element.

the inevitable opportunities that will follow, I’d say the anticipation that has been tailing them since their first run

Nick: It’s not a huge room either so we were all a couple

of singles is anything but far-fetched.

of feet from each other and I could hear everyone clearly. Acoustically I’ve never recorded anywhere quite like that.

Calling me from their current port of call, an Airbnb in Leeds, Lily, Nick, and Lewis took a break from prepping

Lily: Yeah, usually you’re quite separated. I reckon if we

for their imminent Independent Venue Week tour and

recorded with him again it would be so interesting to see

recapped their latest stint in London.

how far he takes it, because we only had the one day with him.

Words by Amber Lashley, illustration by Pauline Pete

26


You said when talking about ‘Song About Love’ that

Lewis: It was so small! I felt like there were so many

you think a lot of songs, even when not explicitly, are

cables around me! Couldn’t even step 10cm to the left.

about love (or lack thereof). What is your favourite not-about-love love song?

Lily: I think what [Nick] said about there being no support act is interesting. It was super small and busy. It was

Lily: I guess when I said that I was especially thinking

special to be releasing that song that we had been looking

of songs that are political or have a certain ideology they

forward to for so long at a sold-out London show, and with

want to present. A lot of songs I listen to have a concept

no support act to bring in tickets, it was just mad.

about society that they want to talk about. If a song is written about protesting something, like protesting the

Lewis: I still get surprised.

way someone is treated, then you’re showing love for that someone who is being mistreated. So if you write a

You guys are all living together now, and I know a

song that’s anti-racist, then it’s a love song, because it’s

couple of you lived together before, how does being in

showing love for a community that’s being attacked. Now

each other’s space change the dynamic? Does it at all?

that I’m trying to think of songs that could back up that opinion, my brain is broken.

Lily: I think it’s made us write better! Or at least write more. Since we’ve moved in here it’s been our most

No, it makes sense, I would say that is just true, there’s

productive writing time.

no need for any evidence there. Obviously, I came and saw you perform at both Third Man Records and The

Lewis: I think because there’s no pressure to fit it in a

Lexington this week, they’re quite different capacity-

specific time frame, it’s just like, if we’re feeling it we’ll

wise, is there a difference in approach or feeling for a

write a song. There’s no like “right, we’re gonna meet

smaller show compared to a larger one?

here, tomorrow, 3pm, and we’re gonna write a song!”. We’ve also had a lot of practice spending time together so

Nick: Well we didn’t really have a lot of time to think

it’s been quite a smooth transition.

about anything during the day, it’s just next thing you know it’s 8:15pm. When you’re playing to a really

Lily: Yeah it doesn’t really feel weird.

crowded room that’s only there to see you, and there are no supports, it’s pretty weird.

So this is temporary then?

Lewis: It’s always weird playing a gig that’s so small, I’m

Lewis: We’ll probably go to a different Airbnb after this.

way more intimidated there than at the big ones. You’ll

It’s really weird because we don’t have anything here,

literally have someone standing right in front of you and

everything is in a storage locker and this is just some

it’s just got a whole different atmosphere. Not necessarily

weird little pitstop.

added pressure but there’s just a different kind of vibe, you feel kind of exposed.

Nick: We’ll probably have quite a few more pitstops.

Nick: Yeah, you’re really presenting yourself.

Artists are usually quite creative across the board, obviously, people aren’t just interested in one thing.

Lewis: [Third Man] was a fun gig, and it was mad seeing

Are there any other mediums you are particularly

so many people there.

interested in or would like to get involved in?

Third Man was really intense. I was in the third row

Lily: Everything for me. I finished a drawing yesterday

and I was basically right in front of you, so I can

and I’ve started teaching myself to paint. I want to write, I

imagine that it was a lot…

want to make films.

27

English Teacher


Lewis: I think film as well. [To Lily] You know you were

Lily: Yeah me too, we just want the most concise ‘this is

talking about how we could make that silly little TV

our album and we’re proud of it’ album, ever. I want to

show?

listen to it and be like, I would listen to that.

That you wanted to make a TV show? Or that you’re

Lewis: I want to listen to it and feel like I definitely

going to make a TV show?

couldn’t have put more effort into it.

Lily: Just like skits!

Lily: We don’t want to regret anything.

Lewis: You know when you’re just chatting shit, we’ll just

Nick: Which is sort of impossible, but that just spurs us

write down skits that are kind of funny and we’re like,

on.

“we should just make a sketch show”. Lily: I’m really excited now about making this TV series, Lily: I see it as something like Tyler the Creator’s one, an

we’ve spoken about it for ages!

adult swim type, I don’t know… You know when people talk about those friends that get together and are like “we are so funny we should start

Lewis: …Nonsense.

a podcast”, it’s just like that. Lily: Nonsense, but like, kind of jokes. Lily: And then everyone is like - this is just the worst shit Lewis: Doug really likes clay but birthday boy is not here

ever.

at the moment. Lewis: Stick to music! So I guess, inside of music, what are some things you’d love to do in the next year?

I reckon you could do it.

Lewis: Write an album.

Lily: We could do it, whether it’s a good thing that we should do, I don’t know.

@hipaulinepete

28




Maga zine



Hailing from Louisville, Kentucky - the city that brought

It’s interesting we drew this as a past card. Listening

us such cultural stalwarts as Muhammad Ali, Slint, and

through the Wombo back catalogue, I feel like some

Bonnie Prince Billy - three-piece Wombo are sagely

of your earlier releases are a lot more wild and

levitating apart from the rest. Twirling psychedelic

unrestrained than your most recent album ‘Fairy

melodies across spidery post-punk webs, the combined

Rust’, which feels a bit more measured.

talents of Sydney, Cameron and Joel produce sounds at once preciously ethereal yet pointedly direct, like a spate

S:I think we’ve definitely refined it a little bit and matured

of lucid dreaming.

it. We feel like we’re growing as songwriters and trying to stay true to those instincts, but also make good songs

With songs that often draw their themes from realms

that we would want to listen to. The older I get, the more

of the uncanny - nightmares, folk tales and the like - it

refined I think we naturally become in songwriting. It

seemed as if the only way I would adequately plumb the

really can’t be helped in a way. It’s just different, y’know,

depths of their psyche was through suspicious and occultic

we’re just growing up.

means. And so, with a deck of tarot cards at my fingertips (A hastily downloaded app on my phone), and the vast

Joel: We’ve been playing together for a lot longer, just us

expanses of time as our canvas (zoom), let us interrogate

three. When we did [debut album] ‘Staring at Trees’ we

the passions of Wombo’s past, present, and future - a

had played music for a couple months together, and didn’t

simple three card tarot.

really have a good feel with each other musically. We were crazier back then, so the music was crazier.

Our first card, representing your past is…[laughs] “Lust”. Let’s talk about your ‘primal instincts’ as a

Especially on ‘Fairy Rust’ there’s a lot of references to

band!

the uncanny, mythology and old fairy tales. Where does this interest come from and why put it into the music?

Sydney: I do think that in the band we’ve always tried to go with our gut instinct on music and songs. I’ve been

S:I think I just read a lot of stuff like that. I like to keep

hearing a lot about theory based art lately - about trying to

it vague to a point where everyone can relate to it and

make things fit into a certain category, or keep up with the

make what they will of it. I felt like these words had nice

times, or be relevant. And we’ve never really done that.

sounds and melancholy feelings. And I wasn’t trying to

We’ve always gone with, I guess, our ‘primal instincts’ on

be that deep about it, just trying to paint this picture with

where the music should take us. And I have a crush on our

these words, on top of the melodies, because the melodies

music so I guess there’s a little bit….[laughs] Our music is

always are the main thing for me. There’s a little bit of

lustful! You should see our shows. They get really raunchy

autobiographical-ness about it, but take what you will

and people just writhe around on the floor. It’s gross. I

from it. Read into it. Or don’t. Just enjoy the music.

don’t know why...

Whatever you want.

33

Words by Elvis Thirlwell, illustration by Eva Klemann-Kochhan



I guess we move onto the next card, representing the

This vaguely links, but not really, to something else I

present. It’s “The Five of Discs”, representing worry,

want to talk about. I want to discuss Louisville, and

stress and instability!

Kentucky more generally. I’ve not been there. I don’t know much about it. What were your experiences

J: oh no! [laughs] This is why we broke up!

growing up and being a band there?

I guess there’s a lot to worry about now, being able to

S: It’s a smallish city. It’s a place where there’s a

afford the ‘luxury’ of being a musician…

community, but also, you can keep to yourself too. I feel like places like New York and LA, there’s so much stuff

S: Definitely we worry about financial matters with the

going on all the time, that I feel like if I lived there, I’d

band a lot, because we don’t have money, we don’t have

be pulled left and right, and doing so much shit…oh my

families that are like “oh here’s this! Here’s that!” We

god… FOMO all the time! social stuff all the time! Here

don’t come from a super wealthy background. I mean, we

you can hide away a little bit, and I like that about it.

live in Kentucky. I grew up being pretty dang poor, and

There’s really pretty areas. Kentucky’s pretty poor, but it’s

not really having that much financial help. I read an article

beautiful. I enjoy living here.

the other day that was about this, about how the art world is becoming an echo chamber of this specific viewpoint.

J: It’s not tiny. Louisville is a big city relative to

Because a lot of artists who are really getting out there

everywhere around us. It’s over a million people. There’s a

are better off. There’s a lot of wealth in the art world now.

big art scene. It’s kinda nice. It’s big enough to have stuff

What are their experiences? What is their viewpoint on

happening all the time. But cheap enough that you can

life? I can’t relate a lot to that kind of shit, because I don’t

afford to go on tour and pay your rent when you’re not at

come from that. But we are lucky because we have [our

home. It’s pretty central. I mean, Chicago, we don’t even

label] Fire Talk. We have a lot of worry and stress, but at

blink travelling there anymore, it’s like a five hours drive

the same time, we just do it, we just keep going.

up there.

Joel: It’s definitely hard. The past couple of years working

5 hours in the UK and you’re at the other side of the

a full time job, trying to get time off for touring…

country!

Eventually the goal is being able to tour long enough that you don’t have to work a full time job. That will be maybe

J: We’re coming to the UK for the first time in May!.

in the next couple of years, we’ll see

None of us have ever been to Europe, so it’s gonna be many firsts for us.

It’s weird how that’s the ambition for so many musicians. Just to be able to play music! That should

What are your perceptions of music in the UK?

be a starting point right? S: I’m always hearing cool bands and I’m like, “ooh I Joel: I mean, we’ve made it work really well. But yeah,

wonder where they’re from?” and it’s like, oh, they’re

it’s always something we’re worried about. Am I going to

from the London.

get time off? Do you have to say no to some opportunity because we need to work?

35

S: We love Dry Cleaning. Also Cate Le Bon.

Wombo


J: She’s Welsh! Mandy, Indiana - We love them. It’s always felt like a big thing for UK bands to go to America. There’s an established history there. J: It feels the same. We’re like,“we have to go to Europe. It’s the promised land!” I’m sure it’s just a ‘grass is greener’ thing. You’re like “New York City!”, and we’re like, “London!” J: Lots of people have been hitting us up for years now being like, “hey, when are you coming to Europe?” Finally getting to go over…hopefully we get to see a lot of people who have been following the band and wanting us to go over us for a while Anyway, it’s time to look into the Future…we’ve got ‘The Princess of Cups’ - representing sensitivity, creativity and naivety. That sounds good right? Looks like you’re going to have a harmonious, slightly wayward, but ultimately fulfilling future! J: ‘slightly wayward’ is an understatement for me [laughs]. That tracks out for me I relate to that I’m glad you didn’t get ‘The Tower’ J: What’s the Tower? Everything’s shit basically. J:[laughs] I like how ambiguous this one was… I definitely feel like it’s promising for writing songs. That’s it. We’ve gone through the whole of time, and the whole of the world. And we’ve made it to the end of the interview.

@evoeve_illustration

36



Duos have broadened the barriers of sound since music’s

Tash: We want to capture the live show. The experience

inception. Take the free jazz collaborations between John

is energetic, heavy, weird. We chose ‘OGO’ because it

Coltrane and Pharoah Saunders, the Chemical Brothers’

shows off these qualities. The name alone is silly and fun,

fusion of electronic and rock music, Tom Morello and

showing that we don’t just take everything super seriously.

Zack de la Rocha’s anger in Rage Against the Machine. Each of these partnerships have added to the expansion of

How does this translate stylistically?

tradition. Today, O. do the same. T: We consider our sound to incorporate the heaviness of O. are Tash Keary on drums and Joe Henwood on baritone

rock, dub, electronica and hip hop.

saxophone. Meeting through bands they both played in, the two found a shared love of heavy rock, throwback

Joe: We both enjoy heavy music. That doesn’t necessarily

electronic music and sound system culture. Immediately

mean something heavily distorted, loud or super technical.

unconventional in their setup, the duo are accustomed to

We enjoy imperfections in music, and every time we play

being labelled ‘experimental’ or even ‘weird.’ Though 18

‘OGO’ live it’s different. Having Dan Carey on production

pedals for a saxophone only highlights this, O. argue that

was a wicked fit. In terms of the dub element, he knew

the music itself is totally accessible.

what he was doing because he went to Jamaica and studied with Lee Scratch Perry.

Released via Speedy Wunderground last November, O.’s debut single ‘OGO’ demonstrates how the duo

Is there a lot of freedom in your live sets?

overcome the limitations of monophonic instruments. Unsurprisingly, they’ve leapt over this hurdle, using

T: There’s already a lot of freedom when there’s just two

new stage technology to do so. Importantly, there is

people. Recently we played Eurosonic in Groningen and

no computer, no pre-programmed loop to play along

I was so nervous I played all the songs double speed. We

to – everything is done live. This may seem impossible

can also alter the set based on what the crowd wants – if

considering the almost robotic technicality that goes into

they want to mosh from the beginning, we’ll work to that.

each rhythm and riff. Yet, O. welcome imperfection with open arms and are calling upon the unpredictability of

J: All our effects on stage also bring a randomness. We

improvisation to launch them into 2023.

have no computer, it’s all live from our pedals, always unpredictable. Sometimes things break and we’re into it.

As O.’s first release ever, what do you want ‘OGO’ to

Except…once my saxophone broke and we had to stop the

say about you?

whole gig.

Words by Poppy Richler, illustration by Alice Meteignier

38


What’s your relationship with improvisation?

J: Saying that, Soccer 96 and Comet Is Coming are a big influence – the fact that there’s so few of them making

We start writing our songs by improvising. It might sound

such a big sound.

like we’re just jamming in the live sets, but the tunes are So, is heavy music your go to for dancing?

all pre-written. Improvising the whole set would take a confidence that I don’t think either of us have just yet.

T: I love dancing to weird rock music. We saw Gilla Band Have either of you ever feared improv or received

last year. That was one of the heaviest and best gigs I’ve

advice to conquer apprehension?

ever been to.

T: I love improv but it’s got to be the right setting. There

J: Neither of us are massive going out people. But we

are lots of jams in London, but they are very high pressure

both love dub sound system culture. The massive sound

and everyone’s trying to do their own thing. For me and

makes you want to move. When it comes to head-banging

Joe, most of our improvisations started during COVID in

mosh pits, I remember watching the crowd react to black

our bedrooms, unsure if gigs were ever going to happen

midi when we supported them on tour last year. People

again. It was a low stakes situation. That’s the best –

were just doing whatever they wanted, whether it be going

seeing what happens and not playing to impress anyone.

crazy or standing at the back with their arms crossed.

J: We like to not think about it. With a horn, improv is

That’s a refreshing perspective. People can be

linked to jazz and black American music. We are both

judgmental about crowd engagement.

greatly inspired by pioneering musicians within that, but also like to explore different improvisations in dub and

J: You never know – someone may look like they’re

rock too. We’ll often record a bit of our improv and that

having a boring time, but they’re actually having an out of

groove or riff could be the start of our next tune.

body experience.

T: It’s always been important for me to be around

‘Weird’ has come up a lot in this interview. Your music

musicians who encourage you to listen to others when you

is also frequently referred to as ‘experimental.’ Why do

improvise. It’s easy to feel like you’ve got to play loads

you think this is?

of impressive stuff, but it’s best to just interact with those around you.

T: The instrumentation. It’s immediately ‘experimental’ because it’s just baritone and drums. But Joe and I agree

Your music reminds me of musicians like Shabaka

that if you ignored that, the rest of the music is actually

Hutchings, Nubya Garcia and Ezra Collective who

quite accessible.

fuse jazz and electronic music to create a club sound. Did you always want your music to have a danceable

J: There are passages in the live shows that go

groove to it?

harmonically or rhythmically ‘out’. But we never rinse that for too long. We always return to the groove or

T: We’re both influenced by that music and played in that

melody.

jazz scene. I grew up drumming to loads of electronic music – a genre all about making rhythms people can

T: It’s also because of Joe’s pedals.

dance to. Joe and I shared quite similar tastes growing Can you tell me more about your technical setups?

up – heavy rock music that’s less dancey, but still has a pulse that you can head nod to. I don’t think there was a conscious time where we were like, ‘let’s make something

J: To get around the saxophone only playing one note at a

people can dance to.’

time, I split my signal so there’s two of me.

39

O.


I put an octave on one channel to make it extra low. I send that signal to a bass amp and there’s your bass player. On the ‘main’ channel – the melody line or voice – I use a harmony pedal to create harmonies. Combined with bass, those two things create a power chord. Think Nirvana’s ‘Smells Like Teen Spirit,’ Rage Against The Machine. Then we’ve got distortions, filters and ‘dubs’ (reverbs and delays). These make the sound more electronic – they can replicate a synth or a wawa pedal. Though we might play to loops, they never have a pulse. That’s a key rule. T: My snare drum goes through a delay and reverb pedal. It’s more straightforward. But overall, we’re talking like 20 pedals on stage. Speaking of playing live, last year you had a residency at The Windmill. What was that like? T: We love jamming with and learning from other musicians. We’d invite someone we look up to musically to do a solo set before us. They’d do a solo set then come jam on one of our tunes. We had Edna from Goat Girl, Wonky Logic, Rosie Turton, Shunaji, Izzy Burnham, Tal Janes and Pete Wareham. And what does the future hold for O.? T: More releases, and we want to play more festivals – that sweaty 2am slot. DJ stages too. J: We’re looking forward to our first tour! I also want to get more pedals. Finally, if you could be another instrumental duo, what would you be? T: I’ve always said the second most likely instrument I’d play would be trumpet. J: If that’s the case, I’d take the rhythm. I don’t want to say drums, so how about a steel pan with loads of pedals? T: It can be called like ‘P’ or ‘M’…

@alicemeteignier

40


Tatjana Rüegsegger

To his last days in 2020 he guided me through photography, always had an input on projects I started and sent me to see exhibitions that he deemed important for “a student of rock’n’roll” as he used to say. I’d say that was my real photography education. Although I did leave Zurich to go to LCC for a while – which is where my love and connection to the UK started to grow. How did you fall into music photography specifically? After discovering Dorothea Lange and my passion for photography I thought about the fact that to be able to live off photography one had to be a massively successful one. I needed a sort of side hustle. That’s when the movie “Almost Famous” came in and it came to me: JOURNALISM. But it had to be music journalism. So aged 15 I launched the music section of a then-growing Swiss online youth magazine and started interviewing as many bands as possible. When I look back at that time now, it feels like a totally different life. But that’s how I started out: doing loads of interviews, going to loads of

After befriending Rolling Stone co-founder, Baron

gigs and asking if I could shoot them.

Wolman by chance at the age of 15, Tatjana Rüegsegger has forged a career combining her two passions, music and

What’s your average work day like?

photography. It starts with a coffee. That’s about the only consistency We’ve written about Tatjana’s incredible, immersive

of my day-to-day work life. Due to working as a

project, ‘Brexit Bedrooms’ and more recently it was her

photographer, a production manager for a venue in Zurich

photos of Lime Garden that adorned the cover of issue

and also being a tour manager no day is the same. It

41. We thought we’d dig a little deeper into the Swiss

usually comes in waves: Some months are a non-stop mix

photographer’s work and process.

between it all. Essentially, they’re similar though: coffee, meeting up with the artists and making them feel at home

Please tell us a bit about your background, education

wherever they are and comfortable so they look amazing

related to photography etc.

on the photo or can do their best performance on stage.

When I was 15, I was determined to contact Annie Leibovitz to interview her for my final school paper on the Rolling Stone Magazine. Didn’t get to her e-mail, surprisingly, but I ended up finding Baron Wolman’s address. Not knowing who he was apart from having taken photos for the magazine, I reached out saying I was a fellow photographer (wow) and I had a few questions. Turns out he was the first chief photographer and cofounder of The Rolling Stone. He asked to see a few of the photos I had most recently shot (my friends and my cat mostly) and that’s when he started to be my mentor.

41


What photographers have had the biggest influence on you? Baron Wolman through his mentoring. Aside from his own photography and all the exhibits he sent me to see, there’s a part of one of the early e-mails he sent me that’s stayed with me ever since: “The subject gives something of themselves and the photographer captures that moment of intimacy. It is important to harmonize with the subject, to try and bring out the soul of the subject. Too many photographers insinuate themselves into the picture; they think that they are more important than the person they are photographing. Wrong!!”. That’s influenced me a lot. Would you say there is one theme, however vague, that runs through all of your work? I guess there’s a certain music activism in it with my personal projects like my book “Brexit Bedrooms” where I portrayed musicians in their bedrooms talking to them about the realities of Brexit threatening their livelihoods. Maybe a feeling of strongly being on the side of the musician and wanting to empower them?

@tatjanarueegsegger

42


In an age where boundaries have become increasingly

The work on this record started not long after ‘EW’

blurred between genres, musicians have become more

came out in early 2021; how do you see the album now?

adept than ever at building worlds around their art.

Is it everything you thought it might be from the start

Whether turning to elaborate concepts or shrouding their

of the process?

work in layers of mystique, disregard for conformity has almost become the norm in some circles. This has allowed

Eleanor: I think because we played a lot of the songs live

both the creator and listener to delve to places that they

before it’s come out, there’s been two journeys. They’ve

may not have previously imagined possible.

been growing as songs in that sense and adapted to the context of where we’ve been playing them, but I haven’t

The world that Robbie & Mona take you to is one of

listened to the album for quite a while, so my memory of

a dream-like state; transient thoughts drift into focus

it is largely built around how we play it live.

before disintegrating moments later, with nothing quite making sense. Much like awakening suddenly from a

W: I don’t want to call it a lockdown record, but I guess

dream, you find yourself questioning the world you found

some of it was written during that time, and so there’s

yourself in, desperately trying to place yourself in that

little things in the record that show that. I was recording

fantastical realm again but without ever truly grasping its

piano at home, and the cat that we lived with at the time

true meaning. It’s this state that you find yourself in with

came in the room and was asking for food and screaming,

Robbie & Mona’s music, constantly searching for one

and I left it on the record because it felt like you were in

thing, and each time finding yourself somewhere new.

the room.

Speaking to the couple behind the project, Will and

There’s quite a big difference between this and your

Eleanor invited us into the bizarre world of their new

debut, and you’ve said that this is the record you

album ‘Tusky’, and shared some of the process behind its

initially wanted to make anyway. What things were

creation.

there about ‘EW’ that you wanted to elaborate on and what did you want to leave behind?

How are you feeling about the imminent release of ‘Tusky’?

W: There was a mood within ‘Tusky’ that we hadn’t explored on the first album, something a bit more ballady.

Will: We sat on it for ages, and it’s always a strange

‘EW’ was kind of a collection of ideas and not necessarily

process putting out music. It almost feels like nowadays

songs, so maybe that’s why it came out as more of a sound

you put up a post and it now exists in the world –

sculpture.

technically. It feels quite detached from real life. I got a message from a friend yesterday saying “oh, I’ve not been

E: We wanted it to feel more grandiose and eccentric.

on Instagram for a week so I didn’t realise your song came out”, and I thought, “is that how you find out now?”

43

Words by Reuben Cross, illustration by Michael Highway



W: On ‘EW’ there was always the feeling that a song

I suppose all of this is quite different from your

wanted to end sooner, but we’ve found ways to add more

experience of being in other bands as well, there’s

to the arrangements.

no escaping the fact that you’re working on stuff simultaneously.

‘Tusky’ feels like more of an album than ‘EW’, which had more of a mixtape feel about it. Something else

E: There is always that worry that I’m never able to hear it

you’ve added is a whole host of collaborators such as

fresh or for the first time. On one hand it’s good because

Bingo Fury and Monika from Nukuluk. What was it

you can really immerse yourself in a song, but it’s bad

like inviting others to join the process having just been

because you’re unable to just hear it for what it is.

working as a duo on the debut? You’re hearing it grow in real time. E: The second part of making the album was made once we were out of lockdown, so we were a lot more out and

W: It would be nice to wipe your brain of the music

about and able to share ideas.

you’ve made for six months and then come back to it with completely fresh ears, but that’s also why releasing

W: We just saw more people and valued people’s

music is weird. You’re putting something into the world

expressions and what they had to bring to the table. It

that you’ve listened to thousands of times before anyone

wasn’t a conscious thing, we just had these ideas we

else has listened to it for the first time. How they process

wanted to do and it required other people to make it.

it without having had the context is something I’ve never

Usually I’d do it all and it would sound a bit shit, but this

wrapped my head around.

album warranted actually having people do some cool What are some things that provided an unexpected

things on that they were good at doing.

influence on the making of ‘Tusky’? E: I feel like that was something that we didn’t have when we were making ‘EW’, but it brought a different feel to

W: The film Bad Boys.

this album. E: It’s such a small thing, but the last song ‘Always Gonna What new things have you learnt about each other’s

Be a Dead Man’ is a mixture of that and La Belle et la

ways of working in the making of this record?

Bête, because it’s an ode to the world-making in fiction but also how there is always a dead man.

W: One thing I’ve learnt from working together is that I can get quite obsessive with the musical side of things

W: We were listening to a lot of Drake for some reason. I

because I can spend all hours of the day on things, and

still do. It didn’t really seep into the record I don’t think,

maybe I wouldn’t give Ellie enough time on things.

because the album isn’t like that, but I’ve always wanted to make drill and trap music. Maybe ‘Wenders’ is my

E: In order to be creative and to go into that world I need

attempt at doing a Robbie & Mona drill/trap track.

quite a lot of privacy, whereas a lot of people can get there when they’re being collaborative. That’s why it works as

E: Mixed in with Wim Wenders films (laughs). It was

a duo, because it becomes a little bit like pass the parcel.

specifically inspired by This American Friend.

You have the ability to be private but also together if you want.

45

Robbie & Mona


W: In ‘Dolphin’, beneath the track is a load of electromagnetic frequencies going on because we’d been talking about how ghosts communicate through those frequencies, and so I got a load of these inputs around the room and recorded the currents running through the house. It also has recordings of wind from West Norwood graveyard, so it’s a mixture of these embedded supernatural concepts. What are things people mistakenly think influence you? E: Twin Peaks, except we’ve never watched the third series. I really want to, but whenever we do a live show, people always say it’s a lot like that. W: Also Beach House. That one winds me up. Everyone says we sound a lot like them, but I’d never listened to them. When I did it confused me, it’s probably because Ellie’s voice sounds similar. It’s a really uneducated take just because it has a reverb-y female voice. E: Someone’s dad once said we sounded like Goldfrapp. I guess that’s one of those things where you’ve got your pool of knowledge. If this is the record you wanted to make initially, what’s the next one you’d like to make? E: I think when it first came together it definitely was the record we wanted to make, but now we’re quite ready to pursue a different mood. I think it’s going to be something more to do with movement and sensuality. We’ve been talking about it not necessarily being a listen for headphones but more for a club. W: The stuff we’re writing is with the live show in mind, so we’re making it as we’re playing live. It’s a more immersive experience for everyone involved. The two albums have very much been ‘write song, perform song, change song’ in their format, but maybe now it’ll have a lot less chaos. Our idea of what sound can be has changed quite a lot since we made this album, so it might go back to the more fragmented style.

@michighway

46



Small-town bands with big-city sound are a rare gem, and

We wanted something fun, unique, and representative

Brattleboro, Vermont’s THUS LOVE, shines brighter than

of where we are now for people to hear on this tour. So,

most. Melting, velvety vocals; intricate, hypnotic drums;

it’s definitely somewhat of a rebrand, heading in a new

and uniquely melodic basslines with tones to die for;

direction.

created the perfect recipe for the band’s brooding debut album ‘Memorial’ in late 2022. Feeling comfort in control,

Lu: Our songs are growing as we do.

the band has pushed their DIY spirits beyond limits, hand-printing their own merch and recording the album

Maybe it’s too soon to ask, but is album II on the way

themselves whilst simultaneously building the studio.

then?

It’s a testament to their intuitiveness, innovativeness, and boundless camaraderie for each other, propelling them to

L: Yes, absolutely. It’s going to be garage rock as fuck, but

where they are today.

also a pop album?

New singles ‘Put On Dog’ and ‘Centerfield’ unleash a

E: It’s going to be really fun and different.

powerful, sultry beast that THUS LOVE tried protecting you from in their debut. But it’s far too late for that now;

L: But still very much us.

the cage door is wide open, and the collar is now tightly around you.

E: Because we’re playing it.

Right before jumping on stage for their debut London

When you recorded that first album, am I right in

show at the Sebright Arms, vocalist and guitarist Echo

saying you were all living in the same apartment? How

Marshall (she/her), bassist Nathaniel van Osdol (they/

did you find that?

them), and drummer Lu Racine (he/they) joined me for a pint to talk about what they’re all about.

Nathaniel: It was crazy, actually insane.

I absolutely adored your debut album, and now you

E: Our bathroom didn’t have a door.

have two new singles. They feel pretty different, got more of a bite to them. Do you feel yourselves

L: We got very comfortable with each other. Otherwise, it

gravitating towards a new era in THUS LOVE,

was so special and truly some of the happiest days of my

perhaps?

life. It was during lockdown, so there was nothing else to do but music. We had the gift of all the time in the world.

Echo: The record very much represented where we were at the time and what we had gone through, saying goodbye to

Go on then, if you could each assign yourselves a role

many special people, hence the name ‘Memorial’.

in that house, who’s who?

There are four instruments on the album, yet only three of us, so we had to start compensating for that lack of

E: Lu’s the stay-at-home dad. Nathaniel’s the working

synthesiser, especially live.

mother. I’m the closet goblin, working on the same guitar part all day.

Words by Will Macnab, illustration by Bahij Jaroudi

48


L: Making dinner every night was amazing. It’s important

Were you always into the production side, or was this a

to just nourish yourself in every way when you’re diving

way to help maintain that DIY ethos?

into shit like this. Nathaniel’s grinding out at work, bringing home the bag, and Echo’s in the studio shouting

E: I’ve never done something like this; we didn’t know

“Fuck!” over and over.

how to do it, and that scared me.

Nathaniel: It was a great way to unwind from work. Get

L: But also drove her.

home, and dinner’s on the stove, perhaps with a lovely martini. Seeing Echo hammering away on the laptop, they

E: It has become a new passion, simultaneously with

put the headphones on me, and I just melt into the couch

realising that it was necessary for us to enter that next

and listen to what’s been done for the day.

chapter. Now, I love it. I want to save up a little nest egg and open a studio for young bands to come in and record

Lu, did you have a special dish?

for nearly nothing, having that same opportunity.

L: Beef stew.

Got any DIY tips & tricks?

N: Noooo, it was the chickpea curry with lime.

E: Get Reaper! It’s a free DAW (digital audio workstation). We recorded our whole album on it. And get

E: Chickpea curry with lime, rice, and veggies; it was so

an SM57. You can record anything with it.

good. So, you identify yourselves as a queer band; what can you tell me about music as a form of self-expression

L: Well, my favourite was the beef stew.

and your thoughts on being labelled as a queer band? I hear you’re quite the studio magicians, too; you built your own studio in the apartment?

E: Verbal language is constructed and evolved through societal and political limitations. When you are verbally

E: Honestly, it was a hyper obsession with many articles,

trying to express yourself, it’s likely that you are not

videos, listening to every lecture: Steve Albini, Sylvia

well understood through those means. Music is versatile,

Massy. We did it with one microphone. Well, I used a kick

ambiguous, and broad; you can do anything. As a vocalist,

mic for the vocals, but then for everything else, we just

I have fallen in love with making up my own words. When

used an SM57. The soundproofing for the amp isolation

you sing it with a certain delivery, it becomes something

was just Nathaniel’s closet with all of their fur coats. In

new and beautiful. We identify as a queer band because we

the most literal of ways, we are absolute beginners.

don’t want to be misunderstood. But we don’t want to be

N: You deserve a little more credit; you put it together so

seen as queer musicians; we want to be seen as musicians,

fast. Echo approached us one day with the idea of making

as human beings.

the studio. The next day I got home from work, and there it was—the studio was done.

N: Music is personal when you’re creating it, and it is impossible to divorce that from who you are. So, of

L: That’s so her. When Echo has her mind set on

course, we would be making queer music. Of course, that

something, it’s fucking done. And that’s one of my

would not necessarily be at the forefront of what we’re

favourite things about her. Our friend Matt mixed it so

doing, but it is very much a visible part of it.

well and spent so much time on it too. Big shout-out to Matthew Hall.

49

THUS LOVE


E: A lot of our music is about being queer. A lot of the

L: I hope it makes you feel beautiful. I hope that for you

lyrics that I write are about my own personal experience

and everyone in the audience, there’s a point where we’re

or ours as a group. But it’s also just music. At a certain

all together, present in one moment. We’re all in one

point, we’ll just stop saying we’re a queer band because

room, sharing a beautiful memory.

it’s not like others say, “hey, we’re a cis-man band”. Lastly, seeing as your album is titled ‘Memorial’, And how do you feel about the relationship between

what’s one little thing you will never forget about this

being trans and the genre of music you fit into?

crazy journey you’ve all been on together?

N: Considering our fanbase is mostly older cis-

N: We played a show in Pittsburgh last summer, at The

heterosexual men, I feel like we are sort of introducing

Rock Room.

this entire generation of people to queer identities in a way that isn’t shock value. It’s not tabloid headlines of,

(Everyone cheers for The Rock Room)

“Oh my God, trans women in bathrooms!” No, it’s more, “trans people on stage, making music you like”. And we

N: We pull up, and it’s a bunch of bikers and goth chicks.

get misgendered constantly. Many of them still don’t view

It was like being transported back to 1987. Everyone was

us as queer in any way.

smoking inside. We played in a room of maybe 10 people and made more money that night than any other on that

L: It’s essential to be seen. There are not enough trans

tour. Walking into a room covered in graffiti, red lighting,

people in the music industry. Trans people have been

and so much smoke that you could hardly breathe. It was a

around since the beginning of time, and we have a spot in

really good time.

this industry too. It’s not a trend. It’s just our life that we live every day.

L: Our friends, baby! And honestly, I want to give a shoutout to my mother. Her support as a parental figure and a

Are there other artists in the queer space that you want

mentor has been so important. I love her so much. The

everyone to go listen to?

same thing about our friends back home—that same crowd of 20 people who continuously showed up.

E: Absolutely. The first one is our best friends in the whole world, Lahnah. They’re fantastic.

E: Yeah, our fucking mums! I love my memory of the first time I spoke with Nathaniel at Marlborough College at a

N: Beetsblog. So sexy, an incredible lyricist and guitarist.

cowboy-themed party they threw.

L: Robber Robber.

N: Technically, it was a horse-themed party.

E: Dari Bay, and even the bands we are playing with now.

E: Okay, it was a horse-themed party…they are terrified of

Mhaol and Sprints, all diverse groups of people.

horses. I went up to them, my first question was, ‘do you play music?’. Immediately I asked them to join the band,

N: They’ve got some bisexual anthems, for sure.

and they said no.

I’m really looking forward to seeing you play later.

N: You gave me your number too, I didn’t end up texting

What am I in for?

you either.

E: Saucy, rambunctious, self-exorcisms.

E: You didn’t text, you did not call, but I was persistent. L: That bitch.

@bahijjaroudi

50




Mary in the Junkyard haven’t released any music yet, but

C: Yeah. I’m not a huge fan of this mug though (gesturing

they’ve become a recent staple in London’s independent

to the huge skeleton mug) because it’s quite scary. It

venues, playing multiple gigs a week and often pulling

violates the niceness of having a cup of fruit tea.

bigger crowds than the acts they’re supporting. Their intriguing sound balances moments of tender reflection

How did you guys come about as Mary in the

with cathartic bursts of release. The result is an

Junkyard?

intoxicating live show that is so obviously enjoyable yet vulnerable for the band. Ahead of their set supporting

C: I’ve been writing songs for a really long time and then

Divorce at the So Young gig, we spoke to them on the

last summer we were in a different band together and

stairs (and eventually in the smoking area) of the Sebright

started writing together. Then we just sort of got a show

Arms about their songwriting process, knitting, and the

by accident and it started there.

slightly horrifying skull mug that singer Clari was sipping fruit tea from.

How do you accidentally get a show?

How did the warmup go?

C: Well I had this EP out [Clara FT] which originally was released as Mary in the Junkyard and the booker at

Clari: We think this is probably the biggest stage we’ve

the Cav listened to it and booked me as that and then I

ever played on so we’re pretty excited.

realised I didn’t want to do it by myself. After that we just kept doing it, we weren’t actually going to start a band it

What’s your favourite venue that you’ve played in

just sort of happened.

London so far? What made you decide to differentiate between that Saya: We love the Windmill! We’ve done quite a few

earlier EP and this new stuff, changing it from being a

shows there and it always feels so nice to go back. Our

Mary In The Junkyard release?

first show was the Cavendish arms and that was pretty cool as well. The sofas and the dog mugs *laughs* they

C: I think it’s because what we’ve written together is so

have these proper dog mugs.

different from my lonely acoustic tracks, even if some of them are the same songs.

I feel like you need to start stealing mugs from the venues you play.

53

Words by Eve Boothroyd, illustration by REN



So what does a standard songwriting process look like

Some of the songs she’s brought us have been a bit quieter

to you?

at first and then have become louder depending on how it feels when we play as a band.

C: *laughs* I usually just go on walks and sort of sing into my voicenotes. And then I get back and I listen to

So what’s the process like for you as the rest of the

them, or I listen to them on the train a lot, and I’m like oh

band, do you write together or in separate parts?

that melody sticks out to me. I really like writing lyrics as a sort of stream of consciousness, like almost mumbling

D: Together we tend to jam it out. Definitely in person,

lyrics, and I think that a lot of the beauty of lyrics are

always in person. It’s because we want it to be fun to play.

the sounds that the melody makes and the way it fits in together. I think words are very melodic so I like writing

S: We like that energy and the energy of playing together

in a kind of improvised way.

as a band. I think that the highlight of the end of 2022 was just a lot of playing together and playing as a band.

Do you write things other than lyrics, like poetry? You’ve been playing loads of live shows which is great. C: Yeah I do, I don’t really write books and things but I like writing my ideas down and I have loads of notebooks.

D: Yeah it’s been amazing and all so natural as well, like we play one show and then someone would get in contact

When you write the songs are they primarily about you

and ask if we fancy playing this. Definitely right now

or about characters?

we’re just trying to play as much as we can. Gigs just keep coming and we’re like “oh that’s nice”.

C: I literally write from random things that I’ve thought about. I have my book of thoughts and I’m currently on a

Have you noticed a difference in the way you perform

writing course so I just have little ideas and, I don’t know,

in comparison to those earlier shows?

manifestos. I would really struggle to be like “this is a song about time or… my childhood or something” they’re

D: We definitely have more energy and learned what we

more like this is the state of mind that I’m in right now.

enjoy playing most. What we enjoy about playing songs is

But I’d love to write more concept songs cause I really

how much we can do as a trio and within the format of the

like it when people have a whole rounded idea in a song.

song as well. That first show was just sort of… flailing. I think what we really enjoy, and hopefully what comes

The new stuff is a lot heavier, do you differentiate

across to the audience, is that a lot of what we’re playing

between the projects in tone or did you just naturally

comes from us just sort of looking at each other on stage,

start writing more heavy material?

noticing each other’s presence and trying to catch those moments. For every performance, especially on the drums,

C: I think there’s something I really love about playing

in terms of rhythm, there’s a lot of time signature changes,

cathartic music. It’s nice to have a place to sing in a

there’s a bit of danger and I think that makes it pretty

screamy way *laughs* but it can be intense.

exciting.

David: I guess part of it is when Clari has a song and the

C: I imagine it’s like a dancer trying to time lifts, you

rest of us come to add our parts to it we get to figure out

have to kind of look at your partner and think “when am I

the sounds.

gonna jump?” *laughs*

55

Mary In The Junkyard


S: It’s really fun music to play, regardless of it everyone else hates it, which I hope they don’t, I enjoy the shows so much. We had one show, which was on the day of the ice and also on the day of the strike. There was literally no one there and I swear I had the time of my life. I think the capacity of the room was like 300 and I would say there were maybe nine people there. I was just like “why am I having such a good time?” and it was just because of the music we were playing. I’m not sure if you have recorded any tracks but is that difficult to translate when it’s so much fun live? D: I find recording quite weird. We did live takes and then redid the vocals and added extra bits. I think our style is quite minimalist so our recordings are trying to sound like a live session, we don’t want to add in too much. I think being in separate rooms when you’re recording is hard because we feed so much from being near to each other and the energy of each other. I guess it is difficult to record but I think we got a pretty good recording down, I’m happy with what we got and it sounds pretty live. What are your plans for the upcoming year? S: We’ve got a show on Sunday and then a show on Wednesday and then another show the week after that *laughs* so just lots of shows really, as many as possible. And we want to make more demos and record more. Tell me more about the clothes you wear. S: Clari is an amazing knitter and knits me my tops so that’s the uniform that I wear. But it takes a while so you only have four alternating outfits. Do you think you’ll all end up wearing knitted outfits? S: I hope so. Top to tail, head to toe. But I think that would be pretty sweaty.

@drawren

56



You don’t have to listen that closely to hear the echoes of

It must have been a little weird being spread out for

NYC’s alt-rock greats etched across the surface of Hello

the writing process?

Mary’s output to date. The Brooklyn trio’s sound races with a nostalgic fuzz ripe for soundtracking chaotic house

H: Stella and I would hang out because we were both in

parties alongside the likes of Sonic Youth or Nirvana, but

Brooklyn. We didn’t see Mikaela for a few month’s but

perhaps vitally, the reclined gang of school pals never

then when she came back she had bass parts for every

stray far from the melody or the song.

song we sent her and they were just so fucking good. So much songwriting was happening because of the

Catching up with the band on the eve of their self-titled

circumstances. I was just really sad writing songs where

debut album which arrives this March, So Young hears

I was and then Helena was sad writing songs where she

why they’re more ready to cite Elliott Smith as an

was. We didn’t realise it was going to be a cohesive album

influence as they are Mudhoney, and how lockdown in the

at first.

Big Apple offered them the focus needed to deliver such a vital and compelling body of work, that effortlessly holds

S: It was such a wholesome reunion after all that time.

its own on a vibrant scene.

Something that I always bring up is the bassline on ‘Spiral’. I wrote that song in Helena’s house really

How did the new record come about and what was it

randomly, they weren’t even there, I was just alone for

born out of?

some reason. Then we started workshopping it during lockdown and sent it to Mikaela. She didn’t even send

Helena: It’s been in the works for a really long time so

what her bass part was, she just wrote it on her own and

a lot of the songs were written through the pandemic. It

sent it back, then we heard it in practice in person for

was really a product of that deep boredom and so much

the first time. I was like, ‘wow this is a thousand times

free time. It deals with feeling really claustrophobic and

better’, it was an awesome moment, it was completely

realising things about the people you’re always around.

euphoric.

Stella: I hate to admit it because it feels like every artist

Was it a strange time being in NYC without all the

these days is saying their record happened in quarantine

hustle and bustle?

but they don’t want it to be about that. It did really have a huge impact on the writing style that was happening.

H: Yeah, it was definitely weird. I think the only song on

Mikaela was upstate and me and Helena would write songs

the record specifically about lockdown is ‘Evicted’ which

and then send them to her and she’d write her bass parts

literally mentions being trapped inside. I think most of the

remotely. Then we’d all come back and play together, it

other ones are about interactions with other people during

was a pretty crazy way to write music but it worked out

it as opposed to the loneliness and boredom itself. It deals

well.

with a lot of frustrations of the people you’re around. Stella and I were living with our boyfriends at the time and a lot of things became very apparent at that time.

Words by Rhys Buchanan, illustration by Alison Laing

58


S: It was a really bizarre feeling being in Brooklyn

I guess there’s a purity to it. We played this acoustic show

without all that noise of the city. Suddenly it’s just quiet

last year as well, it wasn’t announced or anything, it was

and you’re inside all day. All three of us grew up here and

really chilled but that was a cool testament to the fact that

we’re used to a lot of stimulation and a lot of stuff to do.

some of our songs could hold up. Like some band’s songs

It must have been even weirder for Mikaela because she

wouldn’t make sense in an acoustic capacity because that’s

was literally with her family twenty-four hours a day.

not what the essence is about, but with us I feel like it can work either way.

Mikaela: Yeah, it was boring and lame. For a long time I Do you feel like it’s a more grown up record?

didn’t know what the songs were about but I would just listen to them. I think being alone and bored made me really hyper-focussed because it was all I had. It was such

M: Definitely, for sure. We were talking to someone

a shock transition, going from having stuff to do in the

the other day who said it’s quite similar to our first EP

grind of the city like going to school, going to work just

‘Ginger’ which surprised me. We always talk about how

to doing nothing, all you have is playing music and I think

different it is, the songs are more mature, the recordings

the three of us were lucky to have that in our lives. I’m

are more mature and we’ve bonded so much since the last

grateful for it.

one came out. So it definitely does feel like a growing moment.

I find it really interesting how you’re just as ready to cite names like Elliott Smith alongside some of the

S: We were able to use the live shows to help develop

more discordant, abrasive touchstones of the nineties,

the songs as well. That’s quite consistent across our

is it important to cut to the heart of the song?

songwriting, we always play them live a couple of times at least before we record. It sounds bad but we’re already

S: I think that’s something that I’m really proud of with

sick of some of the songs coming out on this record in

Hello Mary. I think we do a really good job of that. I

March because we’ve been playing them so much. We’ve

think that our influences are pretty diverse and have only

had a lot of time to sit with some of these songs. We’re

gotten more diverse as the band has progressed. Our

always evolving and growing though so things can change

sound is shifting even now, like Mikaela is starting to

in the process.

figure out this midi keyboard thing and we’re trying to add all of this cool stuff. I think songwriting and noisy

It feels like the NYC scene is in good hands right now

distorted bands and techno stuff are all influencing us

with names like Been Stellar, Geese, Momma and

from different angles, on this record coming out it might

Gustaf breaking out, does it feel like a moment?

be harder to tell the diversity of influences because I don’t think we’d reached for that yet. I still think there’s strong

H: I think that the scene is pretty good throughout the

songwriting and instrumental interplay. Like Elliott Smith

country at the moment.

is a wonderful songwriter, then there’s band’s like Sonic Youth where it’s really about the noise, I think we do fall

Do you run around with any of those band’s or do you

somewhere in the middle.

tend to do your own thing?

I heard that all of your songs start on acoustic guitars,

H: Not really, I think we tend to open for a lot of older

it’s like that old saying, if it stands up on an acoustic

band’s. Like the best and biggest shows we’ve played have

guitar then it will work as a song basically?

been opening for like Quicksand and Sunflower Bean.

S: I think every song was written on an acoustic guitar to begin with on this album, I can only play acoustic guitar sitting down in my room.

59

Hello Mary


That’s interesting you mention Sunflower Bean who

S: The important factor is that I’m a little bit older, when

have achieved so much on the scene and beyond, have

we started the band I was eighteen and they were fifteen. I

they instilled any lessons in you as a band?

didn’t feel phased at all and I think that helped.

H: Yeah, Julia from Sunflower Bean has been so great

It’s easy to get romantic about emerging on the

to us and so helpful. She’s always there for us and has

Brooklyn bar circuit and building momentum in a city

become a close friend. We definitely look up to her and

like NYC, was that as cool as it sounds?

the whole band. M: Yeah, I thought it was amazing at the time and I still S: I feel like we were in more of a scene before lockdown

think it’s amazing and super fun. I really love Brooklyn

with house shows and stuff, but a lot of those band’s

too. We were literally playing a show a week at one point.

dissolved through the pandemic. I think now a lot of the band’s that are part of the scene are transplanted from

H: Same. Even though we didn’t sound good, I think our

other places like LA or Philly. I always wish that we were

first show was one of my favourite ever experiences. It

part of a music scene, for some reason I’m hesitant to say

was a house show and people were trying to get in. I was

that we’re not part of one because I wish so badly that we

terrified and I thought it was the coolest thing ever, people

were. I love that community. There are definitely dope

were like, ‘you guys are awesome’.

band’s from here though like Pretty Sick, Clovis, Stella How big are you guys daring to dream then with the

Rose, Momma, there’s a bunch of exciting things.

record on the horizon, it would be amazing to see you Did you ever feel the weight of NYC’s guitar scene

on these shores soon!

suffocating? S: I would really love to go to Europe. I think it’s totally H: We formed a band in middle school as an afterschool

achievable, right now we’re focussing on trying to get

thing, so we were all so super young really. We definitely

loads of cool support slots outside of NYC. That’s been

looked up to some band’s but people were really sweet

a big focus for us, we’re trying to meet with more people

to us. I was terrified of performing and had terrible stage

over in Europe to explore the possibilities. I think it’s

fright but I didn’t feel intimidated at all.

totally possible that something is going to come up on the horizon for us. In terms of how big we’re dreaming,

M: I feel like we should have been more daunted than we

I think the sky’s the limit. The three of us are really

were.

dedicated and excited, even just to have an album out is going to feel like a golden ticket towards something huge.

@alisonlaingart

60


Editors Sam Ford

Josh Whettingsteel

Writers

Artists

Al Mills

Kim Blue

Sam Ford

Poppy Richler Leo Lawton

Charlie Brown

Amber Lashley Elvis Thirlwell

Josh Whettingsteel Reuben Cross Will Macnab

Eve Boothroyd

Rhys Buchanan

Printed By Ex Why Zed

Email

info@soyoungmagazine.com

Website

www.soyoungmagazine.com

News

@soyoungmagazine (Twitter)

SoYoungMagazine (Facebook) soyoungmagazine (Instagram)

Josh Whettingsteel Inês Viegas Oliveira Sergey Isakov

Martha Verschaffel Pauline Pete

Eva Klemann-Kochhan Alice Meteignier

Tatjana Rüegsegger Michael Highway Bahij Jaroudi REN

Alison Laing

Photos for Collage Camille Alexander Holly Whitaker Pooneh Ghana

Luke Ivanovich

Oisín Hennessy

Special Thanks Al Mills

Jamie Ford

Cameron JL West Jack Reynolds




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