Five Favourites: Sprout

Having received acclaim for previous singles ‘(I’m Just) Getting By‘ and ‘Settled (Here In My Heart)‘, Burnley artist Meg Grooters – aka Sprout – is now set to release their debut EP tomorrow, 15th June. Flowing with lilting melodies, honey-sweet vocals and an uplifting colourful allure, Sprout’s offerings ooze a subtle reflection on life’s anxieties with a soothing, jazz-infused musicality and soulful splendour.

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 their debut EP, we caught up with Sprout to ask about their “Five Favourites” – five albums that have inspired them the most. Read about their choices below:

h hunt- playing piano for dad
I heard this album for the first time as I was graduating from university, but it only became a soundtrack of my everyday at the start of the pandemic in 2020. I played at least a song from it almost every day that year. I think back on when I’d be having my one cycle a day around the park nearby, not being sure if the world was going to make it, and somehow still feeling really comforted by this album. It really soothed my anxieties at the time and gave me a space to feel all of the contrasting, messy feelings that came with both the fear and stillness of the start of the pandemic. I love so much hearing his fingers hitting the keys, him talking to himself, or the pauses to figure out what he’s playing whilst he’s playing it. It’s so intimately recorded – it was done in one take, and originally made as a Christmas gift for his Dad. I really like how it highlights the things that would typically be viewed as ‘mistakes’ in music recording, and makes them earnest and heartfelt. This album really made me want to create music in that way too. I’m guessing it wasn’t intentional but I think it’s probably the most beautiful representation of uncertainty I’ve ever heard; and not to be too dramatic, but I love it to death.

Joni Mitchell- Blue
I mean, it’s a very famous album for a reason! Picking just one Joni album was a pain but it wasn’t really possible for me to talk about her and not talk about the first album to ever metaphorically tear my heart out of my chest and leave it on the floor. A lot of my favourite albums stem from the music my mum brought me up on and my memories of being a kid, and Joni is up there as being one of the most influential on my music making. When I was 16, my mum got all of her old vinyls down and gave me this album, along with a bunch of others (Kate Bush, Billie Holiday, loads of good ones, well done mum). I put this on first as I started to revise. I remember being alone in my room, putting the books down and listening to the whole thing back to back, just lying there. I don’t think I’d ever listened to lyrics so intently before and I still listen to it every break-up and have a cathartic weep. I love it more so for the fact that the first time I heard it was on the same record my mum had listened to it as a teen/twenty something too. That’s generational sad-medicine passed on! Joni is a master of poetry and beautiful singing and songwriting and this album depicts that entirely and that’s that really.

Eliza – A Real Romantic
I love this album so much – it’s so hot, and I feel like I heard this album for the first time and finally felt like an adult. When this album came out I couldn’t believed this was the same Eliza Doolittle pop queen from my high school years and that’s in part what I love about it so much. Hearing the transformation of who she was then when with a major label, to now – making these RnB smokey demos – is really cool and refreshing. It also lyrically comes with an ethos of re-invention, and self-invention, that I can really subscribe to. The songs are all dead groovy and the production is yummy and I just like singing along to it and having a solo bop in my room. It doesn’t feel like it’s trying too hard, it’s not trying to be something new for the sake of being something new, and instead is just really nice and easy to listen to. I love how spacious it feels as an album, and I love how it takes its time. It feels really focused on pleasure and love and escapism, and it makes me want to have a bubble bath and light lots of candles and order three desserts and wear lots of silk, and that’s fun!

Sidney Bechet – Les Années Bechet
When it comes down to it, I’m just a child from the ’90s heavily influenced and somewhat indoctrinated from the many problematic 2000s romantic movie tropes of love and coming of age. Put that on top of my passion for the golden era musicals, and at the core of me is a big cheeseball who wants to be a bit cringe and romanticise their life. So, if you’re gonna do it, I’d say do it to this album. It’s a timeless classic and has seen me through many a sombre night walking home, and many an introspective bus journey. Life looks a bit nicer when you’re listening to this album and listening to it is like having a warm, long-lasting hug for the ears. Aside from that, Sidney Bechet is an outrageously brilliant clarinettist and soprano sax player, and sometimes you just don’t need to look any further than the best work of the legends. I love music for the way it relates to memories and its ability to transport you to a different time and place in your life, and nothing sparks up nostalgia quite like this one. Even the smallest encounter with a stranger could feel romantic after listening to this, and why shouldn’t the mundane moments in life get to feel a bit more lovely too?

Harry Nilsson – The Point!
This album is an experience! So fun, full of wonder, and better listened to with the film (at least first time round). A friend at university showed this to me in my second year when I was having a particularly difficult day and I instantly fell in love with the story, the imagery and the music. It follows the story of a boy called Oblio, who is the only round-headed person in a village where everyone and everything must have a point. It’s all very cute and endearing and metaphorical, and the sort of thing I would’ve loved as a child and find myself recommending to people a lot. When I’m particularly low, I can put this on and things are always a bit lighter afterwards. The music and orchestration is really playful and bouncy and it reminds of all the wacky kids shows that were knocking around when I was younger. It’s simply adorable, with a beautiful tale of finding the acceptance of feeling and being different to others. Very tender.

Massive thanks to Sprout for sharing their Five Favourites with us! Listen to their latest single ‘Come Back (To What Can Be)’ below:

The debut self-titled EP from Sprout is set for release tomorrow, 15th June, via sevenfoursevensix.

Photo Credit: Marieke Macklon

Track Of The Day: Nikki & The Waves – ‘The Phone Song’

Having recently been recommended Manchester band Nikki & The Waves by Chester trio Peaness when interviewing them for our last radio show on Soho Radio, I was excited to hear that they’ll be releasing a new EP in June. Having originally formed in Liverpool, the band have played esteemed venues such as The Cavern Club and charmed audiences at Isle Of Wight festival and Sound City, and look set to bring their joyous energy across the country throughout 2022.

Taken from the upcoming EP, new single ‘The Phone Song‘ instantly hits you with its jangly, quirky energy. Propelled by an uplifting, vibrant groove, it flows with fizzing hooks and Nikki’s lush, sugar-sweet vocals, as voicemails from those closest to the band – spanning Hong Kong to America – are interwoven into the funk-fuelled musicality. Oozing a blissful, shimmering allure – with shades of an eclectic array of influences, from early hip-hop to Lily Allen – it comes complete with swooping trombone solos, sparkling harmonies and a relatable witty lyricism, showcasing all there is to love about Nikki & The Waves. The perfect effervescent bank holiday jam to shimmy along to in the blazing sunshine (we can hope…).

Produced by Joel Pratchett (The Orielles, King Krule), songs to play tennis to – the upcoming EP from Nikki & The Waves – is set for release on 17th June.

Mari Lane
@marimindles

Track Of The Day: deep tan – ‘rudy ya ya ya’

Following last year’s creeping speedwells, London trio Wafah, Celeste and Lucy – aka deep tan – have now announced the release of an upcoming new EP, diamond horsetail. Having been captivating us with their spellbinding post-punk for a few years now, we’re super excited to see what they have in store for us next.

Taken from the EP, latest single ‘rudy ya ya ya‘ offers a bizarrely witty ode to the former mayor of NYC. Maintaining all the wonderfully wacky yet seductively dark sentiment we’ve come to know and love from the band, it’s propelled by an instantly catchy, jangly drive. Beset with haunting, glitchy hooks and sweeping, sultry vocals, the track oozes a swirling discordant allure as it builds with an immense frenzied tension. A strangely addictive, fizzing cacophony, driven by a fierce post-punk energy reminiscent of the legendary The Slits.

Of the meaning behind the track, the band explain:

Caught with your pants down, brown ooze slides down a furrowed brow as sacha interrupts — ! (aka the rudy giuliani diss track you never asked for)…

diamond horsetail, the upcoming new EP from deep tan, is set for digital release on 6th May and physical copies will be available on 22nd July.

Mari Lane
@marimindles

Introducing Interview: LUIANNA

Splitting her time between Berlin and Bristol, innovative electro-pop artist Jasmine Luianna Emslie – aka LUIANNA – has now announced the release of her debut EP, Skiá. Taken from the EP, she has recently shared poignant new single ‘Witch‘. Propelled by glitchy beats and a soaring ethereal splendour as LUIANNA’s celestial vocals flow with a delicate grace, it’s an empowering reflection on addressing past trauma and coming out stronger.

We had a little chat with LUIANNA to find out about the upcoming EP and more. Have a read!

Hi LUIANNA, welcome to Get In Her Ears! Can you tell us a bit about yourself?
Hi, thanks for having me! I’m a producer and singer songwriter. I was born in South London and brought up in rural Wales, I’m half Greek and half Scottish and have lived my adult life in both Bristol and Berlin, so I’m a mixed bag to say the least… I have been in many bands and different creative music projects, but it feels like everything was leading me to this place here, to have the confidence and ability to compose and write songs myself. I’ve chosen a pretty different life than most and have spent the past 15 years squatting in both Berlin and Bristol, enabling me to be able to spend my time doing what I love, instead of chasing after high rents and bills. The combination of music and meditation is how I navigate through this weird and wonderful world and I’m so happy that I’m in a place to start sharing some of it!

How did you initially start creating music?
I started with acoustic guitar and putting my little childhood poems to basic chords. I went on to make a girl group with my two best friends in school and this got me into college. Through college I fell in love with dance music and was somehow bored of seeing an audience sad in all my gigs, so started writing for DJs and producers – it made me so happy to see a crowd jumping and smiling! After this phase, I moved to Berlin and started singing jazz in cabaret venues around the city, and then joined a hip-hop band for a few years, playing a lot of shows in Germany. This was when I realised I didn’t want to be confined to a genre. I wanted to make music that came as and when it did. So I started to save and buy equipment to be able to write my own stuff. Starting with a micro Korg and teaching myself some basic piano, and then a looper and a drum machine and electric guitar. This all came together pretty quickly and within a year I was ready to record this Skiá, my debut EP!

Your new EP Skiá is out on 29th April – can you tell us what it’s all about? Are there any themes running throughout the EP?
The EP is an intimate view into my life. I open up about my father who is a heroin addict, and share how that has made me feel growing up. I also sing about mental health, and what it is to be a woman – the love, the strength, the ebs and flows of our moods and attitudes. And it’s all tied together with love songs, sad but empowering love songs.

You’ve been compared to the likes of London Grammar and BANKS, but who would you say are your main musical influences?
For me it’s Lauryn Hill, Aurora, Madonna, Portishead. I love beautiful majestic pop, and also hip-hop and old school beats. I think I’ve intertwined all of this into the EP.

How is your local music scene? Do you go to see lots of live music?
I’ve been in Berlin for the past seven years and yes, the music scene is thriving. From incredible street shows, smokey jazz bars to epic clubs; small intimate venues, and an array of concert halls – it’s a fab place to be for live music. I’ve just arrived back to Bristol and am excited to get out and see whats happening here too!

And what can fans expect from your live shows?
Vulnerability, a lot of vocal loops, and hopefully a hint of beautiful and original music to their ears!

As we’re a new music focused site, are there any new/upcoming bands or artists you’d recommend we check out?
Yes! Ber is an incredible new artist that I can’t stop listening too, also LushUs are a new group from Germany with their first single out ‘Velvet’ – love them! 

And how do you feel the music industry is for new artists at the moment – would you say it’s difficult to get noticed?
It’s so tough. To get any reach outside of your friendship group is a challenge. I’ve noticed even when my posts do get shared by friends on Facebook it just doesn’t get seen. If you have a ton of money for adds and PR, and you’ve got a great piece of work to promote, then I think it’s straight forward – but as it stands, it’s tough tough tough. A lot of artists are talking openly about how we are musicians, not content creators and there’s a big pressure to keep active online and posting, but it’s not always easy when you just want to make music and not be on social media day in day out. That being said, no-one said it would be easy!

Finally, what does the rest of 2022 have in store for LUIANNA?
I have just moved back to the U.K, so it’s about getting my music out and starting to gig again. Moving to a cabin in the forest and writing more songs!

Massive thanks to LUIANNA for answering our questions! Listen to latest single ‘Witch’ below:

Skiá, the upcoming debut EP from LUIANNA, is set for release on 29th April.