Five Favourites: Montañera

Having recently released her captivating new album, A Flor de Piel, London-based Columbian artist María Mónica Gutiérrez – aka Montañera – creates innovative immersive soundscapes fusing together traditional South American musical influences with contemporary ambient electronics. Breaking through the confines of genre, the album offers a poignant reflection on Gutiérrez’s experience as an immigrant; an artist; a human being. Shimmering with a sweeping twinkling splendour and stirring raw emotion throughout, the album takes the listener on an exquisite sonic journey.

We think one of the best ways to get to know an artist is by asking what music inspires them. So, to celebrate the release of A Flor de Piel, we caught up with María to ask about the music that has inspired her the most. Read about her five favourite songs and listen to latest single ‘Santa Mar‘ below!

Sona Jobarteh – Fasiya
Sona’s album has been a great inspiration for me since the moment I became interested in Senegalese music. Her voice and kora playing were a true inspiration alongside traditional griots who carry this tradition. Her style was a referent for me when I composed ‘Me Suelto Al Riesgo’ – a song I made whilst learning about Senegalese traditional kora music with my amazing teachers Kadialy Kouyate and Lucy Duran in London. I have always found kora music to be very soothing and almost celestial, the timber of its strings captivated me right away. Sona’s album, however, allowed me to understand this tradition through a lens that was in-keeping with my own music. I really enjoy how kora music makes me feel when I listen to it; the same sensation that I was looking for when making my new album A Flor De Piel.

Lido Pimienta – Miss Columbia
I have been a massive fan of Lido’s music for quite a while now. However, when she released Miss Colombia, I really identified with her music as a singer and as a songwriter. She is one of my favourite singers, I love her voice, and production-wise, her album was a great inspiration for my music as well. I love how she blends traditional Colombian music with very fresh, fun and well written arrangements. The sonic world of her music is full of colours – I wanted to achieve something similar in my album, but through my own aesthetic, heavily constructed by synths.

Kaitlyn Aurelia Smith – Ears
This is one of my favourite Kaitlyn’s albums, it captivated me right away the first time I listened to it. Personally I think it’s one of my favourite ambient albums, her tracks are always interesting and really well crafted; they are not predictable, but allow you to flow with them, and I wanted to attain something similar in my album. I wanted to make a really carefully thought ambient album with my voice playing an important role. Her sounds and aesthetic influenced me quite a lot when composing this album with my synths, I wanted each layer to be interesting – each layer to have a purpose and not just to add sounds for the sake of it. This was also the way I wanted the producers in my album to work, and her music was also a great influence to them. Ambient is a very delicate genre, and her album was a clear reference of the craftsmanship I wanted to reach.

Marina Herlop – Pripyat
I discovered Marina not so long ago, but her aesthetic and uniqueness blew me away immediately; I felt very inspired by her from the first minute I listened to her music. She has become an inspiration not only for the making of my latest album, but also for my performances. She looks like a Goddess from the future, and her music is beyond anything I’ve heard. It seems as though she has arrived from the future, and that is how her music sounds. Her aesthetic and how unpredictable her music is have become a major inspiration for me.

Canalón de Timbiquí – De Mar y Río 
I love traditional music from all around the world, however, Afro-Colombian music has been a personal favourite for quite a while now. It was maybe fifteen years ago when I sang a traditional song from Colombia’s Pacific coast for the first time, and since then a huge curiosity and interest for this music was born. Nidia Gongora has become a massive influence for this kind of music for me – she represents the strength of the Afro-Pacific Colombian women, who are all very inspiring. I find this music not only inspiring for its musical vastness, but also for the story of resistance, resilience and joy that it carries. I feel immensely honoured to have a song in my album with one of the current marimba players, Cankita, and with the amazing Cantadoras de Yerba Buena. It was through a process of research to understand their musical practice which began this musical collaboration with them. They are a massive inspiration not only to make music with, but for life.

Massive thanks to Montañera for sharing her Five Favourites with us! Listen to latest single ‘Santa Mar’ here:

A Flor de Piel, the stunning new album from Montañera, is out now via Western Vinyl. Listen / order here.

WATCH: Liv Wynter – ‘VIOLENCE’

An antagonistic, abrasive cry for autonomy and action, Trans and working-class artist and activist Liv Wynter has shared a startling set of visuals for their latest single ‘Violence’. Lifted from their recent EP of the same name, the track is a cathartic, urgent dismantling of transphobic hate and a radical cry for movement against it.

Having recently played gigs alongside other GIHE faves Scrounge, The Menstrual Cramps and Yakkie, as well as performing under their other moniker How To Catch A Pig, Liv Wynter has been a vital force in DIY music and activist spheres for many years. Now, they’re sharing new music under their solo name, with their three track EP, Violence, making a vehement and striking impact on those who have listened so far.

On the title track, Liv sets an unsettling scene; walking home alone in the dark, cold, pursued by a stranger who begins to spew vitriol and hate against trans bodies. In this moment of uncertainty, Liv chooses to respond to the “fight or flight” scenario with unfiltered rage. “I’m not here to convince anyone that we deserve to exist / I’m here to encourage violence” bites Liv, over corrosive FX and crushing, industrial beats. Their direct, no-holds-barred lyrics provide a visceral sense of relief and empowerment; even their menacing whisper of “I encourage violence” provokes a similar incendiary effect.

‘Violence’ is accompanied by a striking set of visuals, directed by Asher McLaughlin. They reflect the sequence of events Liv explores in their lyrics, enhancing the track’s defiant underlying message of radical love, and fighting back against those who attempt to push their hatred on to marginalised communities.

Watch the video for ‘Violence’ below.

Follow Liv Wynter on bandcamp and Instagram

Photo Credit: Jody Evans

Kate Crudgington
@KCBobCut

NEW TRACK: Chelsea Wolfe – ‘Tunnel Lights’

Another dynamic, shape-shifting musing that seamlessly blends delicate keys and dense waves of sound, Chelsea Wolfe has shared her latest single ‘Tunnel Lights’. Taken from her seventh album, She Reaches Out To She Reaches Out To She, which is set for release on 9th February 2024 via Loma Vista, the track leans towards love and acceptance, as the artist actively chooses to step out of the shadows and embrace the light.

Exploring the cyclical nature of healing, Wolfe’s new album is described as “a rebirth”, breaking the physical and emotional chains that once prohibited this cathartic process. “It’s a story of freeing yourself from situations and patterns that are holding you back in order to become self-empowered,” she explains in more detail, and “an invitation to step into your authenticity.”

Whilst Wolfe explored this rejuvenation process on her previous singles ‘Dusk’ and ‘Whispers In The Echo Chamber‘, she fully embraces it on new offering ‘Tunnel Lights’. Tentative piano dissolves into waves of all-consuming sound, guided by her tender, idiosyncratic vocals. “‘Tunnel Lights’ is about actually living instead of just ‘getting by’,” she explains about the new track. “It’s about waking up to the fact that you’ve been languishing in the dark and it’s time to start taking steps towards the lights that’ll guide you out of the tunnel-cave.”

This single marks another poignant metamorphosis for Wolfe, which is reflected in the track’s accompanying video, filmed in Colombia and directed by longtime collaborator George Gallardo Kattah. Watch the video for ‘Tunnel Lights’ below.

Chelsea Wolfe will be playing London headline show at Heaven on Sunday 21st April 2024. Tickets are on sale now.

Pre-order Chelsea Wolfe’s new album She Reaches Out To She Reaches Out To She here

Follow Chelsea Wolfe on bandcampSpotifyInstagramFacebook Tik Tok

Photo credit: Ebru Yildiz

Kate Crudgington
@KCBobCut

NEW TRACK: SPIDER – ‘straight out the oven!’

After watching her storm The Green Door Store’s stage at The Great Escape Festival in Brighton earlier this year, we’re thrilled to see that Irish alt-pop artist SPIDER has returned with her smouldering new single ‘straight out the oven!’. Taken from her upcoming new EP, an object of desire, which is set for release in early 2024, the track is a tenacious pop-tinged anthem that playfully dissects the reasons why we crave affection and attention from others.

“At first glance, ‘straight out the oven!’ presents itself as a fun, catchy ‘blonde, sorority girl who doubles as an over-the-top cheerleader’ rock song, which it is!” SPIDER explains about her new single. “But it’s also a really honest conversation that I was having with myself about the desire to be desired, and confronting the types of people we go to for that validation. It’s that need that we all have to be irresistible – but asking yourself, why do I want these specific people to desire me in the first place? I produced and wrote the entire thing on my own which definitely gave me the space to explore that part of myself, without having to hide it behind a complicated metaphor.”

This self-autonomous outlook permeates the songs on SPIDER’s upcoming EP. She is committed to using her music to gain a more in depth understanding of herself, and to connect with others who may be probing and questioning similar aspects of their own lives. “an object of desire really encapsulates the questions I was asking myself about objectification, desire and intimacy as an ex Catholic school student who grew up in a very religious household,” she continues. “Looking at these three things through the lens of religious trauma and Catholic guilt felt like looking at the Unholy Trinity of Young Adulthood. Like, when does desire start being desire? What is actually so intimate about sex and what is sex when it doesn’t feel intimate? You’ve realised you’ve been objectified – well okay, but what do you do about it?

I feel like this particular view on sexuality isn’t really talked about much, and I just had all these questions that no one could answer for me. Writing this EP was a way for me to explore the conclusions that were put there by a religious upbringing that covered this area of life in so much shame and nonsensical conditions. It also allowed me to process the anger I had towards the ways I was mistreated in the past without the pressure of maintaining ‘grace’. This project feels like the most personal, freeing thing I’ve made thus far!”

We can’t wait to hear SPIDER’s new record in full. Listen to ‘straight out the oven!’ below.

SPIDER was also joy to interview on our Great Escape x Soho Radio show earlier this year.
You can listen back here.

Follow SPIDER on SpotifyInstagramTwitter (X) & Facebook

Kate Crudgington
@KCBobCut