LISTEN: DIDI – ‘Fast And Furious’

Following GIHE favourites ‘Sorry’ and ‘Back Off’, ‘Fast And Furious’ is the fourth single from DIDI, aka producer Lauren Deakin Davies. Having received acclaim from the likes of BBC 6Music and Amazing Radio, DIDI has only been writing her own music since March last year, but is already making plenty of waves! 

Having wowed us with her sparkling, uptempo pop-punk live at one of our nights at The Finsbury last year, DIDI is an accomplished songwriter and producer, who showcases her impressive vocal range with this new offering. With its twinkling alt-pop melodies and soaring, emotion-strewn splendour, ‘Fast And Furious’ is an utterly infectious sonic delight.

Find out more about DIDI and her new single in this exclusive video:

And listen to the brand new single here:

 

‘Fast and Furious’ is being self released on 9th February. And catch DIDI live headlining The Finsbury in London on 6th February for Zoe Konez͛’s ‘Stop Look Listen’ event, and with her full band at The Workshop in Shoreditch on 15th March.

 

Mari Lane
@marimindles

 

Introducing Interview: Hannah Epperson

Having received praise from the likes of Bandcamp Daily and Indie Shuffle, Canadian artist Hannah Epperson is not only a successful Ultimate Frisbee player for Canada’s national team, but a skilled songwriter who creates utterly captivating offerings.

Following 2016’s Upsweep, Epperson is now ready to release the second half of the project – her new album Slowdown. We caught up with her to find out more.

Hi Hannah, welcome to Get In Her Ears! Can you tell us a bit about what you do?
Hey hi and yes! I started playing in 2009 under derelict bridges in Berlin. The band is just me, but sometimes I lasso in a drummer whose style I fancy to rock a circuit with me. I’ve been playing the violin for most of my life, sometimes more seriously than others, always for fun, and largely in collaboration with other inspiring artists across a diverse range of disciplines. But the solo project has been occupying more of my time the last two years, and with a second album release on the imminent horizon, I suspect 2018 is going to be largely focused on touring my solo project.

Your new album Slowdown is out soon – can you tell us what it’s all about? Are there any themes running throughout the album?
Slowdown is Volume II of a two-album conceptual record, the first of which was released in 2016 under the title Upsweep. Together, Slowdown/Upsweep is an expression of two alternate versions of a shared reality, which I’ve characterised under the monikers ‘Amelia’ (side A of both records) and ‘Iris’ (side B of both records). This split structure derives from a screenplay I wrote during an intense period of coming to terms with a deeply challenging and ungraspable personal loss. The narrative follows the psychic collapse of a young man under extreme emotional duress, and his attempt to keep himself intact by suspending himself between two very strong but opposing world orders, embodied by Amelia and Iris. The unusual structure of these two records has also allowed me to experiment with different voices during a period of open experimentation in developing my own sound. Also, the words ‘Slowdown’ and ‘Upsweep’ are names given by the NOAA to “unidentified sounds” that have been detected in the Equatorial Pacific Ocean… The idea of recording sounds without being able to properly identify them is a deeply intriguing theme to me, and seemed relevant to the difficult-to-explain nature of this two-part conceptual album.


You’ve been compared to the likes of Julia Holter, but who would you say are your main musical influences?

It’s really hard to draw direct lines of influence, because I’ve never tried to fashion my music after anything or anyone in particular. But I do know that the incongruent discographies/works of Bjork, Radiohead, Stephen Sondheim, Pete Seeger, The Cranberries, Shostakovich, Bartok and Bach have featured heavily throughout my whole life. An eclectic ensemble, to be sure, and all influential in some considerable measure.

How is your local music scene? Do you go to see lots of live music?
I’m currently based just outside of NYC and visit Brooklyn at least once a week, so the local music scene is pretty incomparable. I have periods of seeing tonnes of live music, though this winter has been more about listening to nature sounds, running water and my big wood-burning hearth in the woods. But yes, live music – the only guiltless way to spend money other than organic apples and ethically-sustainably raised meat from the neighbours.

And what can fans expect from your live shows?
I have no idea, hopefully I’ll always be able to surprise the audience or myself at a live show. I’d say I can promise presence, though… Honesty, flubs, nasty jokes. A forgotten lyrical line. Post-show hugs, earnest ones.

As we’re a new music focused site, are there any new/upcoming bands or artists you’d recommend we check out?
Yes. How do I begin, because what if I forget someone!? Uni Ika Ai, Ryan Dugre, Taylor Ashton, Alexander F/Toth, Twig Twig, The Westerlies, Really Big Pinecone, Omhouse, We Are The City, Landlady, Ian Chang, Cuddle Magic, Tiny Hazard… Shit, I’ll hit you up with more later!

And how do you feel the music industry is for new bands at the moment – would you say it’s difficult to get noticed?
Of course it is, it’s a fucking zoo out here! It’s devastating. It’s magic. It’s a cess pool. It’s a mythical beauty. I know so many insanely talented, skilled and beautiful artists who are making records that have just fucking destroyed me, and sometimes they never end up seeing the light of day because it just takes so much weird energy to build up enough inertia for them to get out into the ‘real world’. And as much as I love that it has become so accessible for everyone to generate “music” now, there’s just so much fucking noise – a lot of it is so banal, and there’s so much pressure to command some sort of kick-ass dank-ass whoop-ass hollowed out laissez faire/lazy flaring social media presence to support your project that sometimes the actual THING – the MUSIC – figures into the equation as an after thought. It’s a mess, but there’s a lot of beauty and earnestness and discipline to be found in all of it if you care to put in the time to find it.

Finally, what does the rest of 2018 have in store for Hannah Epperson?
Who knows… Lots of hiccups, lots of deep dark under-the-eye rings. Hopefully lots of touring, maybe a sustainable income so I can buy  bread for all my starving brilliant friends. Hopefully some shows in North America. Maybe another record, maybe an electric guitar, maybe drum lessons, grad school applications, true love and lots of massage, mastering fermentation on the road – I’m thinking kimchi, I’m thinking sauerkraut, I’m thinking water kefir, I’m thinking…

Huge thanks to Hannah for answering our questions!

Slowdown, the upcoming album from Hannah Epperson is out on 16th February via Listen Collective. Catch her live:

Thursday, 1st March – Shoreditch Town Hall, London (supporting RY X)
Tuesday, 10th April – Servant Jazz Quarters, London

WATCH: Tokyo Taboo – ‘Papercut’

Following last year’s riotous album 6th Street Psychosis, London duo Tokyo Taboo are back with a seething new single.

Racing with a frenzied energy, ‘Papercut’ is a politically charged, in-your-face blast of ferocious punk-pop with shades of the likes of GIHE faves Deap Vally. Complete with front-woman Dolly Daggerz’ powerful snarling vocals and raging raucous riffs, the track is accompanied by a tongue-in-cheek video depicting a group of apathetic 20-somethings participating in an experiment run by evil scientists.

Watch the new video for ‘Papercut’ here:

‘Papercut’ is out 2nd February and catch Tokyo Taboo live on their run of dates with Japanese rockeres Esprit D’Air next month:

5th February 2018 – The Underworld, London
6th February 2018 – Buffalo Bar, Cardiff
7th February 2018 – Mama Roux’s, Birmingham
8th February 2018 – Aatma, Manchester
9th February 2018 – Jumpin’ Jacks, Newcastle
10th February 2018 – The Attic, Aberdeen
11th February 2018 – Audio, Glasgow

Mari Lane
@marimindles

 

WATCH: Hinds – ‘New For You’

Following their debut in 2016, and having wowed us at Visions Festival back in 2015, and Green Man Festival last year, it is with excitement that we’ve seen this week that Madrid band Hinds have returned to brighten our January with news of a second album.

Taken from the album is new single ‘New For You’. Filled with the band’s trademark uplifting, sunny charm and truly infectious charisma, it oozes all the joyous, empowering spirit that we’ve come to know and love. Propelled by a fantastically jangly scuzz, it’s another wonderfully uplifting slice of catchy lo-fi garage rock.

Of the new video, guitarist and co-vocalist Carlotta Cosials explains:

“I thought [football] cannot be more Spanish and that it cannot be a more male sport, and that it is good to present a different gender-reality without even trying hard. I think sports are such a good metaphor with life, with goals, passion and suffering.”

I Don’t Run, the upcoming second album from HINDS, is out 6 April via Lucky Number. Catch Hinds live when they’re over in the UK:

15th April – Glasgow, SWG3
17th April – Manchester, Gorilla
18th April – Bristol, The Fleece
19th April – London, Electric Brixton
20th April – Brighton, Concorde 2

Mari Lane
@marimindles