Amelia’s Magazine | Once There Were Sparks, Now There Are Ashes: An interview with Winter Villains

Winter Villains by Jo Dumpleton
Winter Villains by Jo Dumpleton.

Winter Villains are an experimental, chamber pop band based in Cardiff. In 2013, their alluring debut album ‘February’ was met with much acclaim and shortlisted for the Welsh Music Prize. Having already showcased what they are capable of, their second album Once There Were Sparks, Now There Are Ashes proves they aren’t one trick ponies. This new addition to their discography teases you back out into the wild with their signature sound exploring landscapes unknown.

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Your debut album ‘February’ was inspired by and reflected the fragile beauty of the winter. What inspired you this time around?
Josef: Both of our albums have been a result of continuing to explore our ideas and just letting the music happen. We’ve never sat down and said ‘Ok let’s write an album about this‘, they’ve been subconscious processes, and when the albums were finished, we’ve been able to sit back and think about where they came from. I suppose our music reflects our interest in aspects of human existence that have been part of people’s thoughts, feelings and experiences forever and are still relevant today. The first album has a very nature based theme to it. The songs on that record are mostly about communal survival, wonder, despair and hope amongst the elements. With this record we found ourselves writing about threat, change, loss, fear, but also the beauty of being able to start again and the uncertainty that comes with that. I think there’s a big part of us that struggles to relate to lots of things in the modern world, but there’s something about being a human now that hasn’t changed from early human existence and it’s that essence of human experience that has been the subject of our songs.

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How did the writing and producing processes differ this time?
Faye: They were actually very similar. We write and demo everything at home so when we’re in the studio we know 99% of what we want to happen. There are often small sections that we like to leave open to improvisation or the performance of our friends who come in to play on some of the recordings, particularly string players. We worked again with our friend and producer Charlie Francis (REM, Turin Brakes) who knows us well and our relationship with him is great. Everything feels really easy and straight forward which takes away any unnecessary apprehension that you just don’t need in those situations. I suppose the main difference is that the first album was recorded over 3 sittings during a 9 month period, with the mixing of each session taking place after each recording. This time we got everything down in 6 days then took our time mixing it. We had it mastered by an Icelandic musician, producer and record label boss who’s work we really admire – Valgeir Sigurdsson (Bjork, Bedroom Community). The whole process was really enjoyable.

The video for your first single ‘Empire’, taken from the album, is a beautiful piece of work in itself. Did you visualize how the video might look when you were writing the song?
Josef: No not at all. We’re lucky to live in a really creative city where we have lots of friends involved in different art forms. By chance I was chatting to Cyrus Mirzashafa, who made the video, on email just as we had a first mix of ‘Empire‘. I shared it with him and he instantly had an idea that we loved. He ran it by us in more detail and we were more than comfortable to let him have free reign.

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You’re based in Cardiff, Wales. What do you love most about the music community there?
Faye: There’s been a thriving music community in Cardiff for as long as I’ve lived here and it’s supported by a much wider creative community of designers, film makers, promoters and people writing about music. Anyone who has lived in Cardiff will tell you it’s got all the benefits that a capital city brings, without the negatives of it being too big and unmanageable. There’s a really diverse and eclectic mix of people making music, but at the same time it’s small enough for people to get to know each other, and for it to feel like a real community. It’s been perfect for us because of the type of people we are. We’ve met people through music who will be our life long friends.

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I love the artwork on your album cover. Who took care of that?
Faye: Thanks, we really love it too. It’s by an artist named Florence Jackson. I work in the arts as my day job, and a colleague sent me a link to Florence’s work. Josef and I loved it immediately so we got in touch with Florence to ask her to make a bespoke piece for the album. We were interested in Florence interpreting the music to make a one off piece, specific to the feel and themes of the album. We couldn’t be happier with the outcome.

Winter Villains by Netina
Winter Villains by Netina.

What are your favourite things to do when you’re not recording or touring?
Josef: We both love being outside, so we spend as much time as possible in the outdoors – we love walking, camping, cycling and generally enjoying the landscapes around us. That’s another great thing about Cardiff – there’s so much on our doorstep. We also love most art forms and generally try to experience as much as possible, whether it’s exhibitions or live performances. It’s all very interesting to us. But we have loads of interests that aren’t related to that… animals, food, travel, history, reading… are all things we love.

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You played The Green Man Festival and SWN after the release of your debut album. Do you have plans to play at any festivals this year?
Faye: We’ve got a bunch of dates booked for spring and early summer which is when the album will be out, so that’s our initial focus for now. We’re always interested in playing live as much as possible, and those festivals have always been great for us, so it’d be a pleasure to play at them again.

Once There Were Sparks, Now There Are Ashes is released on Owlet Music on May 11th 2015, and is preceded by single ‘Empire’ out on 13th April. Follow them online on Facebook and Twitter.


Live performance – The Air – Church Sessions.

Catch Winter Villains live on their upcoming UK tour:
27th March – The Grain Barge, Bristol
23rd April – Oxford Contemporary Art, Oxford
24th April – The Globe, Hay on Wye
25th April – Sebright Arms, London
15th May – Phipps NBC, Northampton
16th May – Chapter Arts Centre, Cardiff
22nd May – St Paul’s Church, Cambridge
23rd May – Union Chapel, London
18th July – Harbour Festival, Bristol
20th July – Irregular Folk, Midsummer’s Weekend Festival, Oxford

Categories ,cardiff, ,Charlie Francis, ,Cyrus Mirzashafa, ,Empire, ,Faye Gibson, ,February, ,Florence Jackson, ,interview, ,Jo Dumpleton, ,Josef Prygodzicz, ,Netina, ,Once There Were Sparks Now There Are Ashes, ,Owlet Music, ,review, ,Valgeir Sigurdsson, ,Welsh Music Prize, ,Winter Villains

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Amelia’s Magazine | You Look Cold by Patrick Kelleher: This is no sham rock.

The ICA has always struck me an odd gig venue; with it’s white lights and shiny floors, viagra 100mg symptoms but on Friday 22nd May, pilule something exciting was rumbling in it’s deep dark underbelly and I went home prepared to eat my hat…
I didn’t know too much about Comet Gain before the gig, viagra 40mg and expected them to be over-shadowed by the rest of the line-up, but they held their own in spectacular fashion with their unique blend of Northern Soul and lo-fi, to create a danceable but refreshing rock n’roll.

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The Bats

Putting age before beauty, the Bats were on right before young whipper-snappers Crystal Stilts; the most magical inhabitants of New Zealand since hobbits. Having been around since the early 80s and having released a string of consistently good records they seemed to have avoided become publicly known and are quite the cult institution. The crowd at the ICA, myself included, are, blown away by their awesome crashing and soaring folky rock, with Crimson Envy going down like a treat. They have the look of the modern day Pixies (kinda old), with a sound that veers towards early Yo La Tengo or Low.

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The Bats

Whilst loving the Crystal Stilts’ debut album, I’m always sceptical of hype bands, but Crystal Stilts most definitely deserve their hype. From the first note, their post-punk, melancholic wall of bassy noise and murmur vocals enrapture the audience. Their single ‘Love is a Wave’, the second song played is a butterfly in the stomach shoe-gaze fest of blurry noise and the rest of the set follows to form.

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Crystal Stilts
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It is perhaps over easy to compare Crystal Stilts to My Bloody Valentine and their shoe-gaze peers, (it seems that a lot of Brooklyn bands at the moment are being shoehorned into a neo-shoe gaze poor fit) and whilst an element of that is present; mostly from Jesus and Mary Chain‘s Psychocandy, Crystal Stilts are more indebted to the Velvet Underground in their sustaining of a glorious continous noise, and the tuneful grumble of Brad Hargett’s voice is not dissimilar to Lou Reed. Whilst having roots buried in a deep and fruitful musical heritage, Crystal Stilts manage to create something unique to themselves. A band not to be missed.

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Crystal Stilts
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Photos appear courtesy of Roisin Conway and Cari Steel

Last week I wrote about skate brand CTRL, what is ed and Finnish streetwear is making us giddy all over again with Daniel Palillo, viagra a Helsinki based designer who has recently hurtled into the fashion world. His designs are distinctively relaxed, salve and when I interviewed him he said simply that he likes that “people actually wear the clothes”, citing street style sites as a really positive influence on fashion.

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Daniel’s designs are curious, seeing an emphasis on ease and comfort coupled with often a dark and strange aesthetic. The focus is on oversized silhouettes, cut-outs and graphic prints, and there’s a lot of interest in wearability. I think it’s a hard thing to couple both notions of fashion and comfort without sacrificing one for the other, and it’s a delicate balance to strike.

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Daniel’s designs, like the CTRL boys, extract the relaxed and unselfconscious element of sportswear as well as making them stylish and progressive. Daniel says that “it’s important for me to feel cosy” and I think it’s an enjoyable philosophy in terms of an aesthetic, seeing clothes that look familiar and worn, but simultaneously edgy.

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In a post-Beckham universe with the media heralding the triumph of the metrosexual male, skinny jeans, brogues and hair gel, it’s refreshing to see a designer who sends his models down the runway in beaten up pairs of sneakers. Daniel believes that “clothing should be more than a collar shirt and chino pants”, instead making way for the wardrobe for the moody younger brother who has emerged from his room, tousle-haired and sore-thumbed from too much videogaming, only to head off down the street to cause some trouble somewhere. The graphic prints recall 90s videogames like PacMan and Frogger, juxtaposed with relentlessly modern silhouettes. His Spring/Summer ’09 collection was inspired by ice hockey players and sailors, but equally he says his ideas can be generated by the epic act of hitting search into Google Image.

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This younger brother has got a black side, though. The sense of familiarity is complicated by the movement into the darker realms of nightmarish fairytales, aliens, ghosts and monsters of the videogames themselves. It’s a darkness that Daniel says is influenced by Finland itself, maintaining “we are very pessimistic people here. It’s dark for all the winter, so I guess it affects the way we work.”

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I think the pessimism is countered by something else, and a lot of people have found the tragicomic element of Daniel’s clothing one of the most extraordinary facets, as with the print of the eerie skull with a bouffant hairstyle, an example of two totally non-sequitar ideas that are difficult to respond to with any clarity about how it makes you feel. This is an idea reflected in his interest in playing with proportions of the human body, with his models often striking unnatural poses that impress the sense of distortion from the garments themselves.

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The humour certainly throws the melancholy into focus, and he says that “thats definitely the way I look at life. You can find so many funny things in the saddest things in life”.

You Look Cold left me hot under the collar, viagra buy this debut album from 24 year-old, patient Irish Patrick Kelleher is awe-inspiring in it’s genre-bashing brilliance and refreshing take on a myriad of musical references. Swinging from Vincent Gallo‘s most whispery nonchalance to thumping electro beats circa Talking Heads with David Byrne/ Ian Curtis shouty vocals (‘He Has to Sleep Sometime’) via an obvious interest early 90s hip-hop, perhaps A Tribe Called Quest most noticeably, no small feat for one man!

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There is a vulnerable innocence to Kelleher’s music, it would be too easy to pigeon-hole him as a Sufjan Stevens/ early Patrick Wolf troubadour figure. He consistently avoids being fey or folky by a unique drum loops, his sheer vocal range and spooky sampling and unexpected rhythm pattern worthy of Animal Collective, this is particularly noticeable on the wonderful ‘Coat to Wear’ and ‘Finds You’ . ‘Multipass’ whilst a midpoint interval from the Avey Tare-esque bumps and bangs, stands out as a personal favourite, with it’s quiet electronic epicness.

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This album whilst crammed with diverse reference points and orchestral density avoids convolution or verbosity by having the defined structure of a true masterpiece, with leitmotifs that re-occur, like the Casio keyboard or drum machine. Kelleher clearly has the talent, intelligence and sound knowledge of lo-fi production (most noticeably cassettes although this is never the focal piece of the sound production) to create something that is not in anyway derivative and totally unique to himself.
Kelleher deserves a lot of recognition for this intelligent, spookily erratic and starkly beautiful record.

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You Look Cold’ by Patrick Kelleher is released on 13th July on Osaka Records

Categories ,Album Review, ,Electronica, ,Folk, ,Indie, ,Ireland, ,Lo-fi

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