Madame So: 'Y Generation'

“I don’t believe art, including music, should necessarily be explained” 

Madame So interview by Kelly Munro.

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From writing about music to composing sonic experiments with lyrics that have experienced reality, Madame So strides post punk dimensions. 

A wordsmith musician whose comparisons include PJ Harvey and Patti Smith, the Paris-born singer – song writer is based in London.

New song, ‘Generation Y’, is loaded: Intense tangents of tempos. Guitars singing the harmonies while backing vocals are instruments. Increasingly sculptured with each listen, it winds up tight like a Wonderland clock until ticking out to finale. 

It’s definitely time we found out more about Madame So, one of the stars in our documentary.

November 2019, The Camden Mix Up (Sick Love EP launch)

November 2019, The Camden Mix Up (Sick Love EP launch)

June 2019, rocking up. Madame So filming the ‘Year Of Rage’ video by deux furieuses

June 2020, Locked Down and in conversation with Kelly Munro, who asked;

How long have you been making music?

“I’ve been making music for about eight years. Like many singer-songwriters I started on the open-mic scene, then fleshed my music out with a band when recording ‘The Sell-by Date EP’ in 2013.”

What’s been some highlights so far on your musical journey?

Madame So's single, 'Black is Beautiful' (lead track for the new EP, 'It's Not Even A Colour') Follow Madame So online: Spotify: http://open.spotify.com/arti...

Each of my records is a highlight for me: actually, releasing music and sharing it with people, and putting my songwriting and perspective on life in context through these recordings.

My songs, ‘Sell-by Date’ and ‘Camden Scene’ cutting it to BBC Introducing.

My connection with LOUD WOMEN: playing the first two editions of their festivals, my song Black is Beautiful featuring on their Volume 1 compilation, being the first cover woman of their e-zine (issue #13) …

Bringing rock music to the Bastille Day festival in Borough Market which was packed. It was cool because this type of event is often filled  very safe chanson française.

Getting my first fan art from a Brazilian illustrator named Tomas Santos through Instagram, which has now flourished into us two collaborating on much of the artwork you will see from me in future.

Madame So, the band Autumn 2019 by Ellanie Marinucci

Madame So, the band
Autumn 2019 by Ellanie Marinucci

You live in London but are originally from Paris. How does it affect your music living in the capital(s)? Does it even?

I am a city person for sure, but only really started making music seriously when living in London so I couldn’t compare it with Paris. This said, I always enjoy performing in Paris where audiences truly do engage. But ultimately being a city person, making music in the city surrounding makes my music quite “urban” I guess.

Your single is called ‘Generation Y’. Tell us more: Is there a meaning or story behind the song?

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Yes, it does and it is two-sided or even two-faced if you will:

On the one hand, Generation Y is a reflection on how younger generations are perceived by their older counterparts and how this judgement snowballs from generation to generation. Every older generation seems to resent the younger, more forward-thinking ones, forgetting they too were once the younger generation, and part of progress in the making.

On the other, it is a bit of fuck you voicemail to the shallowness of human relationships these days.

But ultimately, I don’t believe art including music should necessarily be explained and would rather let the listener find their meaning, their own truth in a song.”

Lyric video for Madame So's single, 'Generation Y' GENERATION Y on BANDCAMP: https://madameso.bandcamp.com/track/generation-y GENERATION Y ON ITUNES: https:/...

What albums do you never get tired of listening to?

“‘Baltimore’ by Nina Simone, Grandpaw Would by Ben Lee, and lately I can’t enough of ‘Fetch the Bolt Cutters’ by Fiona Apple”

What can we expect from you this year?   

“I will be releasing a few more singles, all accompanied with their respective lyric videos (sadly the imposed format of our times in the current state of affairs) and hopefully when it’s safe to do so, perform this new material live with my band.”

Madame So, Category: Artist, Singles: You Say, Generation Y, Black is Beautiful, The Sell-by Date, Let's Dance, Top Tracks: Black is Beautiful, Generation Y, If Only You Were Dead - Radio Edit, You Say, Deed is done, Biography: Madame So is a Paris-born singer-songwriter based in London., Monthly Listeners: 116, Where People Listen: London, Los Angeles, Toronto, Chicago, Vienna

Madame So 
“If I pushed your buttons, I’ve accomplished my mission” 

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www.madame-so.com

IDLE NOISE ‘GHOSTS’

For fans of Circa Waves, The Courteeners, The Enemy,  
The Strokes. 
Q&A with Kelly Munro 

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Tell us how long you’ve been making music?

“Collectively as Idle Noise we’ve been making music for the last four or so years, individually a lot longer.”

What’s been some of your highlights so far on your musical journey?

“Selling out Manchester ‘Deaf Institute’ in January 2020, shortly after supporting The Enemy’s Tom Clarke’s sold-out hometown show in December 2019.”

Your single is called ‘Ghosts’. Have you ever seen one?

“Ben (frontman) sees Dead People.” 

Tell us more about the single. Is there a story attached to it?

“‘Ghosts’ is a track relating to a long distance relationship that eventual crumbled. Hence the “too far to hear me, too far to listen”and “harder, together’ in the chorus. 

We think it’s our best work yet, and hope everyone likes it as much as we do.”

Ghosts in the snow Too far to let it go Fall towards the memories of you You're too far to hear me Too far to listen Cry down on the floor And its hard to break free Too hard not to listen Bring yourself back here We fall, more More than ever Harder, together Reaching out to a life once led Its too hard to let it go Hearts Still breaking over Over and over again Time after time We fall, more More than ever Harder, together And you're too far to hear me Too far to listen I die behind closed doors And its always on repeat My only vision Its you Its always you We fall, more More than ever, I'm yours forever Recorded at RML Studios, Wolverhampton Produced, Mixed and Mastered by Craig Davies at RML

What albums do you never get tired of listening to?…

…”Courteeners – St Jude, Sound of Guns – Angels and Enemies, The Twang – Jewellery Quarter”

What can we expect from you this year?

“Potentially another single release later in the year and we’re hoping to get some shows sorted. 

We’ve got three lined up September through to December but it’s all a question of whether they’ll still be going ahead. We’re struggling to book anything ‘cos nobody really knows what’s happening at the minute. We just can’t wait to get out and play on stage again.”

Thank you, Idle Noise. Have a listen to ‘Ghost’ which is out now on all main platforms, that’s the spirit! https://outnow.io/t/idlenoise

JOE PETER IS ‘SELF ADHESIVE’!

“Sticking myself back together again”

Multi-instrumentalist producer, Joe Peter, reveals a brand new project with debut release; ‘Self Adhesive’

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‘Self Adhesive’ is recently released by Joe Peter – By jupiter, it’s a confident intro to a Solo Artist with an obsessive attention to detail. This Brighton based multi talent has created, performed, home recorded, produced and presented an aural gem that is memorable within one play;

“I wanted to kick things off with something that was a bit more guitar based than my other tracks. Lyrically, it was written as a kick up the arse to myself, but also as a reminder to pick yourself up, dust yourself down and start again.”

Tell us how long you’ve been making music…

“I started making music back in my teens and was in a couple of bands in my early twenties. Around that time I got my first proper job at a recording studio so I got to learn how to produce and engineer stuff. 

When I hit thirty I had a bit of a career change in my work life, which meant I took a few years away from making music completely. However, now I’m starting a-fresh as a solo artist and feel like I’ve got my mojo back creatively. ‘Self Adhesive’ is my first single as a solo artist so I’ve only been making music this way for half a year or so.”

Debut track from Brighton based music maker Joe Peter. #SelfAdhesive marks the first step in a new solo project, acting as an introduction to his alternative...

What’s been some of your highlights so far on your musical journey?

“Well, with this project being brand new essentially, I’d have to look back at my previous band for some highlights, musically. 

We got to play in most of the well known venues across London but playing live was never where my real passion lies, I’m more at home in the studio or writing new songs. 

We had lots of plays on the radio from Steve Lamacq who really championed our music, and I’ve had plenty of songs which I’ve written, be featured on TV shows, adverts, idents and things like that. Syncs like these are a god-send for independent artists as it’s a decent way to make a few quid from music (which is increasingly hard these days). 

It sounds cheesy but some of the best times in my life were spent pissing around at rehearsals with my mates, who also happened to be band members.”

Your single is called ‘Self Adhesive’. What are the fave things that stick to you the most?

“I’m a pretty simple fella if I’m honest, so things that spring to mind first are my fiancee, my dog and my amazing family. I’ve got to throw in a bit of exercise and the odd sesh with my mates as well.

Other than that, I’d have to say that music has always been THE constant in my life. I was brought up on a diet of soul, funk and ska cds, thanks to my parents, so I’ve always been drawn to those sounds as well as indie, house and hip hop over the years. 

I moved to Brighton from London a few years ago and I’d have to say that I’m stuck on living by the sea now and can’t really see ever moving back ‘in land’.

Tell us more about the single. Is there a meaning behind the song?

“There’s not so much one story behind it, but on the surface level it’s about me getting my arse in gear. It’s a sort of reminder to myself to dust myself down and stick myself together. 

The verses were written when I was hungover so they also reflect on me looking back, trying to make sense of messy night. There’s also a few lines in there which allude to a collective feeling that as humans we’re making a real balls-up of things at the moment. There’s so much wrong with the world that it’s also about starting to fix ourselves from the mess that we’re in. 

I think my lyrical content will reflect more of these feelings with future songs as it’s hard to not be affected by the state of politics right now.”

What albums do you never get tired of listening to?

“Ooh that’s a hard one obviously, but if we’re talking timeless alums that I always go back to, regardless of mood then I’d include these ones for sure: Simple Minds – New Gold Dream, Stevie Wonder – Songs In The Key Of Life, The Charlatans – Telling Stories, The Style Council – The Singular Adventures Of (am I allowed a best of?), A Tribe Called Quest – The Low End Theory, The Streets – Original Pirate Material, New Order – Technique, The Cribs – The New Fellas and basically any northern soul collection. 

Something like that anyway, they might be different next week!”

What can we expect from you this year?  

“Two further singles, maybe more. I’m additionally working with other producers, singers and rappers to try and improve on each release. I’ll also be making music videos for each track – I like to create them on my phone, which means more of a DIY and personal feel because A) it’s cheap and B) I’m really not a fan of performance videos, they seem a bit obvious to me.”

Also; “I stand in solidarity with all Black lives and communities around the world facing social injustice and oppression”. Donations, Petitions: https://blacklivesmatters.carrd.co/

We repeat, we’re stuck on Joe Peter!

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THE PALPITATIONS: ‘FEED THE POOR, EAT THE RICH’.

Rock band (and Covid19 frontline NHS) The Palpitations release; ‘Feed The Poor, Eat The Rich’ . A pandemic anthemic debut EP and challenge injustice.

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TheZineUK have twitter-pestered for more of The Palpitations‘ eloquent articulation, so it’s sweet to tell more with this news.

Photography: Aidan Dale

Photography: Aidan Dale

On the front line of the NHS battle against Covid 19, doctors and rockers, The Palpitations showcase a cohesive story to transplant the listener directly into the hospital corridors, painting emotional vignettes of love and loss – all the while, soundtracked by intense, emotional vocals and layered musical dynamics.

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The band feel it’s essential that people know what is really happening at ground through the eyes of doctors – not politicians or their propaganda main stream media. “From our own point of view, we want to raise a message of social justice through our own music.”

The EP stands up to the message. 

‘Siren’: is layers of sound building in dark-gazing waves of guitars and vox that ebb back and forth for menacing verses. An 80s Manc alt-punk tinted aura that spills into ‘Lights Out’ which was recorded over a gruelling period of six months at Musicland Studios in 2019, with producer Ian Flynn (who has also worked with more faves from TheZineUK doc including MOSES, Dutch Mustard and Fake Turins). 

Death cult chilling, ‘My Carnivore’ is “a vignette of isolation, lust and loss during quarantine. Inspired by horror movies” as gothic guitar and rhythm seesaws of madness reflect our warped new reality. 

‘Feed The Poor, Eat The Rich’ was mastered by John Davis (The XX) and pulses ambition. These are finely crafted and executed compositions from a band who play from the heart. 

The original release date for the EP was set at the start of the pandemic. The band were genuinely doubtful as to whether they would survive and took out life insurance, because protection for doctors has been so poor.

walk it like they talk it (The Palpitations supporting Weekend Recovery earlier this year)

walk it like they talk it (The Palpitations supporting Weekend Recovery earlier this year)

The Palpitations needed to exist. 

They were formed in 2018 by two disillusioned young doctors who bonded over their shared stressfully harrowing experiences working in A&E. They made music as a therapeutic outlet, telling stories about grief and trauma in the hospital.

This debut EP “Feed The Poor, Eat The Rich” is a narrative product of life’s dystopian reality weaved into a backdrop of angular guitar and pulsating basslines.

Influenced by Detroit punk and South Korean horror movies, the eclectic outfit pride themselves on playing gigs in tailored black suits. Like a rock music jigsaw, each song forms an overall chapter of the cohesive bigger picture.

Listen to Feed the Poor! Eat the Rich! on Spotify. The Palpitations · Single · 2020 · 3 songs.

As do their actions.

Having gained local notoriety for sweat-soaked gigs, The Palpitations hit the national press, and an international stage when they protested outside Downing Street in April 2020, and started legal action against the “government” for failing to protect healthcare workers.

With two frontline doctors treating coronavirus patients on a daily basis, and having witnessed the results of systemic inequalities and injustices, The Palpitations are leading lights in the exciting newer wave movement of guerrilla protest through alternative rock music.

Talking of which, can you believe that any artist should have to put up with this shit. In 2020?

Rock music needs to address racism – The Palpitations

Rock music needs to address racism – The Palpitations

Articulate, literally and musically, The Palpitations are the subject of an ongoing documentary. We need to know what happens next:

https:/instagram.com/thepalpitations 

https://twitter.com/thepalpitations 

https://facebook.com/palpitationsmusic

Words: Caffy St Luce