Seguici su Seguici su Facebook Seguici su Twitter
Scopri EarOne client

WHISPERING SONS - Cold City (Radio Date: 16-11-2023)

WHISPERING SONS - Cold City (Radio Date: 16-11-2023)

WHISPERING SONS

ANNUNCIANO IL NUOVO ALBUM
THE GREAT CALM
IN USCITA IL 23 FEBBRAIO

ASCOLTA IL NUOVO SINGOLO
"COLD CITY"

La band belga Whispering Sons annuncia il nuovo album "The Great Calm", in uscita il 22 febbraio via [PIAS] Recordings.
Oggi condividono il cupo "Cold City", un altro assaggio del nuovo album e qualcosa di completamente diverso dal quasi gioioso primo singolo "The Talker".

"Cold City" è gelida come suggerisce il titolo. Descrivendo un desiderio irraggiungibile, sembra una canzone nostalgica, anche se una nostalgia per qualcosa che ancora non esiste. "Abbiamo scritto il testo abbastanza in fretta", spiega la cantante Fenne Kuppens, "la vera sfida è stata trovare i suoni giusti per trasmettere il sentimento della canzone". Sovrapponendo synth su synth e aggiungendo molte texture, i Whispering Sons hanno creato una canzone piccola e fragile, ma ricca di atmosfera.

Il video di "Cold City" è un altro capitolo del cortometraggio "Balm (After Violence)", presentato in anteprima al Film Fest di Gand e al Left Of The Dial di Rotterdam con una proiezione speciale e una performance dal vivo.

Watch the video here: https://youtu.be/SNhpmVJMAas
 
Listen to ‘Cold City’ here: https://whisperingsons.ffm.to/coldcity

Following the dark, expansive power of 2018’s Image and 2021’s minimal Several Others, Whispering Sons’ third album ‘The Great Calm’ represents a reimagining and rethinking, though this growth has produced a series of songs that are still defiantly and uniquely true to the group.
To start with Whispering Sons are a five-piece once again. Original drummer Sander Pelsmaekers had to drop out of playing music after suffering nerve damage (and even took the role of the group's tour manager in the interim) but is now able to return on synths. Bassist Tuur Vandeborne has moved over to the drum stool, while the band’s long-term engineer – an experienced producer in his own right – Bert Vliegen has joined on bass. Guitarist and songwriter Kobe Lijnen and vocalist and lyricist Fenne Kuppens retain their roles, but they too have adapted and evolved their approaches for The Great Calm.
Yet while this might all seem like upheaval from the outside, for the band these changing currents have in fact led them to an artistic place that feels comfortably their own.
“I think the most important thing about us is that we met as a group of friends and started the band,”
notes Kuppens, “this is something that came out of a love for music and an eagerness to play together.

 

And now we’re 10 years further. Not that much has really changed. The dynamics are always the same. We're very close to each other, we’re very good friends, so to switch things around was easy.”
Yet making this new record felt different in a way that has pleased and inspired its creators.
With Vliegen’s production credentials to call on, rather than give the band musical sketches to be fleshed out later as he did previously, Lijnen was able to provide more fully formed pictures of his potential new songs.
“Before, the songs were finished in my head but not in a way the group could grasp the full meaning of the idea,” explains the guitarist. “This time Bert and I worked on the demos for a couple of months before we sent them to the rest of the band. Then Fenne could start writing lyrics.” A native Flemish/Dutch speaker (“although speaking isn’t my forte,” she suggests bashfully), a study of literature at university led Kuppens to adopt English as her songwriting tongue. “I'm not really a writer, per se, I find the idea of getting your thoughts onto paper really hard,” she confesses. “It can be a big struggle for me, but I start writing when I’ve got a deadline or something I have to do like a song, so I only write for the band really.”
Yet ‘The Great Calm’ proved not quite to be the expected “struggle”. With Lijnen’s more formed demos offering a strong vision for the album’s sound (“I wanted to include more guitar on the record again, more energetic guitar,” he notes. “On the second record we stripped down the gothic atmosphere of the first album but in doing that, I think it was maybe too minimalistic”) his songwriting partner found herself immediately connected to the music.
"It was really good to have these demos in a more mature form because it created an atmospheric whole, so it was easier for me to write lyrics,” Kuppens reveals. “I knew what Kobe’s songs were about straightaway, so the themes of my lyrics really clicked into the vibe of the music. The first song I wrote words for was ‘Cold City’, and it was very clear from the start that it takes place in winter, immediately it had that sort of atmosphere around it. The album really started from there.”
Encouragement then came from an unexpected quarter, American poet Louise Glück. “The funny thing was that when I finished that first song, I took up a book of poetry by Louise Glück and there were exactly the same themes and images in those poems,” recalls Kuppens. “I was like, ‘this can’t be a coincidence’ so I started exploring that and I created a framework, a story for the whole record. Once I had a story figured out, I let go of it because I felt it also limited the writing, you don’t want to get stuck within a framework. But once I got through that process the ideas for each song just became very clear.”
Recorded in four weeks – two in the Audioworkx studio near Eindhoven, Holland, before being finished at the start of 2023 using a homemade set-up on Vlieland, a small Dutch island just off the North Sea coast – the power, energy and beauty behind The Great Calm’s making is etched through the heart of each of its 12 songs.
The insides of a car gutted by fire, which adorn the album’s cover chimes with The Great Calm’s wider sense of renewal. In fact, the photograph by Belgium-born, Australian-based artist Wouter Van de Voorde was selected by Kuppens who art-directed the record while she was in the middle of writing album opener ‘Standstill’.


“He showed me this picture and I knew I really wanted to do something with it because at that time I was writing a song about a car and driving through your childhood memories, driving through the past,” she explains. “When I saw this burned-out car, it just clicked again, like the moment with the poetry.”
And the creative connection to Glück went deeper still, with the poet – inadvertently – helping to name the album.
“There was just one verse where she wrote about the great calm and I was like, ‘wow!’ It felt very cinematic,” Kuppens adds. “I like the sense of grandeur in a phrase like The Great Calm. It just really describes what the characters in the songs are striving for, this sense of peace and calmness, but it's also something that's probably non-existent too because it sounds too much like a dream. It’s just too big a concept and I find that scale funny but in a serious way. So it fits the album because everything is about moving forward. The record is more hopeful, there’s more beauty in it. Our last album was very dark and always very destructive. I guess this one is still a bit destructive, but there's hope in that destruction.”
Pre-order ‘The Great Calm’ here: https://whisperingsons.ffm.to/thegreatcalm

 

Ilaria (Spin-Go!)
16-11-2023
Condividi su Condividi su Facebook Condividi su Twitter

News Correlate

WHISPERING SONS
Micro (Spin-Go!)
27-01-2021



Torna Indietro
CHI SIAMO | SERVIZI | PUBBLICITÀ | SCARICA L'APP