FIVE FAVOURITES: Kira McSpice

Finding strength in vulnerability is something that multi-instrumentalist Kira McSpice has been carefully leaning into, on both an artistic and personal level. Her beautifully titled new album, The Compartmentalization of Decay, is a poignant reflection on trauma and life after sexual assault, which she personifies through the natural protective and healing mechanisms of plants, in particular, the maple tree. Her exquisite voice and dynamic string arrangements make for striking and hypnotic listening.

Plant pathologist and biologist Alex L. Shigo writes: “Animals heal, but trees compartmentalize. They endure a lifetime of injury and infection by setting boundaries that resist the spread of the invading microorganisms.” Kira McSpice draws on this natural phenomenon on her latest record, slowly becoming more resilient in the process.

We think one of the best ways to get to know an artist is by asking what music inspired them to write in the first place. We caught up with Kira to ask about her “Five Favourites” – five tracks that have inspired her songwriting techniques. Check out her choices below and scroll down to watch the video for Kira’s latest single ‘Knife like a Spile‘ at the end of this post…

 

1. Kate Bush – ‘Hello Earth’
Kate Bush is my very favorite. When I was 19 I got her album, The Kick Inside, on CD and drove around blasting it and trying to hit all the high notes. I can’t really explain how much her music means to me. She taught me how to sing. Before I found her I thought I was supposed to have this kind of low vocal fry thing going on with my voice but once I found her I realized I was supposed to go higher and weirder and it felt like I had discovered who I was. This song ‘Hello Earth’ makes me crazy. It’s part of her album, Hounds of Love, and within the album there’s this 7 song story about a person lost at sea. It’s such a beautiful concept and basically ‘Hello Earth’ is when she’s floating away and losing consciousness and becoming detached from the world. She’s drowning and there are these huge waves in the song that come over and over as she’s drifting farther away and it’s just so powerful and emotional.

2. Joanna Newsom – ‘Only Skin’
Probably the most beautiful song ever. Every time I hear it I discover something new. I feel like it’s one of those songs that will be with me all my life and mean different things to me as I get older. Sometimes when I need a good cry I’ll listen to it and when she gets to that part about 6 minutes in I let loose. It destroys me. I think it’s the melody that does it during that part. Her melodies and the instrumentation and the lyrics… I just love it all so much. Also these lyrics: “While down in the lowlands the crops are all coming; We have everything/ Life is thundering blissful towards death/ In a stampede of his fumbling green gentleness” those lyrics… are insane. Her lyrics changed the way I thought about lyrics. I really take them seriously because of her.

3. Elgar – ‘Cello Concerto in E minor, Op. 85’ (played by Jacqueline du Pré)
I started playing the cello when I was really young and Jacqueline du Pré was (and will forever be) my favorite cellist. Her performance of the Elgar cello concerto is her most famous and the concerto breaks my heart every time. When I was growing up, I would move around in a really dramatic way while playing the cello – she was famous for her dramatic movements and I thought that one day I’d be just like her. There was a movie about her and her sister called Hilary and Jackie, and in the movie she wears a shiny green dress while performing, so I wore a shiny green dress for my performance of Twinkle Twinkle Little Star when I was 4. The way she plays the cello is unlike any other. Her performances were full of so much emotion and energy, so much drama and sadness. She taught me that emotion is essential in performance.

4. Stravinsky – ‘Firebird Suite’
I played Stravinsky for the first time in high school with the symphony I was in. It was insane. We ended up touring with it in Europe and got to play this piece every night. ‘The Firebird’ changed me and how I thought about orchestral music. I hadn’t been introduced to the cool composers yet and when I finally got to play him it was a door into a very exciting realm for me. It felt like my world had expanded/shifted, like I realized the symphony could be used in a crazy way. It was the beginning of my discovery of more modern composers and more experimental music. I’ll always remember playing the very beginning of the piece. It’s so brooding and evil sounding. I fell in love immediately and wanted to recreate that feeling in different ways. I think I like Stravinsky because he does a lot of weird stuff but it doesn’t feel distracting, it feels like it has a purpose.

5. Talk Talk – ‘New Grass’
I chose this song because I always come back to it. I think it left an impression on me because of how sad it feels while still also feeling hopeful. I’m always drawn to music like that. It’s also got this cyclical structure that goes on and on. I remember when I first heard it I was hypnotized and didn’t want it to stop. Didn’t want to leave the world it created. I also hear little secret sounds? Loops? Tremelo strings? going on underneath everything and I think that’s genius. Those details create such a wild landscape that the songs live in. There’s so much existing in it, making it feel so full but at the same time it feels spacious. I don’t know how they do it. I’m always striving for that I feel like. I want to produce a record that feels like that.

Thanks to Kira for sharing her favourites with us!

Watch the video for her single ‘Knife like a Spile’ below

Follow Kira McSpice on bandcamp, Spotify, Youtube, Facebook & Instagram

 

Photo Credit: David Weindorf

WATCH: J. Zunz – ‘Four Women and Darkness’

Dense beats and jagged electronics combine on ‘Four Women and Darkness’, the latest single from Mexico based musician J. Zunz (aka Lorena Quintanilla). Lifted from her second album Hibiscus, the track is a haunting, minimalist interpretation of an unnerving story Quintanilla was told by her grandmother and is accompanied by a visual piece that aims to reflect the jarring nature of the tale.

“[My grandmother] told me that once during wartime in México in the late 1920’s, she and her sisters were hidden by her grandmother in a little, cold secret room,” Quintanilla explains. “She hid them there because the militia wanted to search the house. Soldiers used to look for women or girls to rape them or to kidnap them. My grandmother and her sisters stayed there in the dark room for hours until the soldiers left.”

‘Four Women and Darkness’ is Quintanilla’s addition to her grandmother’s frightening narrative, and the video for the track explores the ambiguous theme of darkness further. “I asked four close friends of mine to express their own darkness,” Quintanilla comments. “They all come from different cities and backgrounds. I instructed them with some movements remarking and reassuring the limits of our bodies, which for years have belonged to everyone but us.”

Watch the video for ‘Four Women and Darkness’ below and follow J. Zunz on bandcamp for more updates.

Photo Credit: Sofía Ruesga

Kate Crudgington
@KCBobCut

Track Of The Day: A. A. Williams – ‘Melt’

A cinematic, slow-burning exploration of self-autonomy; A. A. Williams has shared her latest single ‘Melt’. Lifted from her debut album Forever Blue, which is set for release on 3rd July via Bella Union, the track is an epic six minutes of beguiling vocals, brooding bass lines and dark orchestral sounds.

“Let go of these promises” muses Williams in the opening lyric to the song, permitting herself to start anew and explore what it means to be alone again. She blends quieter moments that centre around her vocals with the fleshed out sound of a full band throughout the track; reflecting the uneven path to autonomy.

Of the track, Williams explains: “’Melt’ addresses an individual’s search for, acknowledgement of and acceptance of independence. After only believing in their own fragility they come to realise that they themselves were never dependant on others, others depended on them. Within this newfound strength they find comfort.”

William’s sublime treatment of ambiguous subjects is what makes her music so captivating. A classically trained pianist and multi-talented musician, her blending of post-rock and post-classical elements makes for exquisitely raw listening. Watch the video for ‘Melt’ (directed by Steve Turvey) below and follow A. A. Williams on Spotify & Facebook for more updates.

Photo Credit: Thomas Williams

Kate Crudgington
@KCBobCut

LISTEN: Hilary Woods – ‘The Mouth’

A fleshy, twisted lullaby about personal hesitation; Hilary Woods has shared her latest single, ‘The Mouth’. Taken from her second album Birthmarks, which is set for release on 13th March via Sacred Bones, the track is a somber yet powerful listen; laced with strings, saxophone, and distorted drone noises.

Speaking about the track, Woods explains: “The impulse to write ‘The Mouth’ came from a longing to articulate feelings aloud that I failed to express til the moment had passed.” Though fueled by uncertainty and doubt, ‘The Mouth’ is one of Woods’ boldest, most confident tracks. It’s a dense, layered, carefully constructed soundscape that provides space for healing and acceptance.

Written & recorded over the course of two years between Galway and Oslo whilst Woods was heavily pregnant, Birthmarks looks set to be her most personal and powerful record to date. Inspired by the works of Norwegian experimental noise producer & filmmaker Lasse Marhaug, the images from post-war Japanese and wet-plate photography, to the secret life of trees; Woods’ far-reaching influences are what make her art so mesmerising and transcendent.

Listen to ‘The Mouth’ below, and follow Hilary Woods on Facebook & Spotify for more updates. Catch her live at Cafe Oto, London, on 18th May

Photo credit: Joshua Wright

Kate Crudgington
@KCBobCut