‘I’m not a fan of very emotional singing. It’s more interesting to have a robot sing a heartfelt melody’

Usually found hiding behind a pair of dark glasses, Doviak is the mysterious and ice-cool multi-instrumentalist and producer who is best known for his work with Johnny Marr – he plays guitar and keys in Marr’s band and has co-produced the former Smiths guitarist’s four solo albums: The Messenger, Playland, Call The Comet and Fever Dream Pts 1-4.

In the past few years, Doviak, who is based in Manchester, has been releasing his atmospheric and often cinematic, electronic-heavy solo songs on digital platforms, as individual tracks or EPs. His music is inspired by ’80s synth-pop, electro, Cold War espionage – on his social media profile he calls himself cyberspace’s foremost purveyor of ‘Spywave’ – European travel, John Barry and gothic rock.

Say It With Garage Flowers had a clandestine meeting with him to discuss his solo work, his thoughts on new tech such as AI and immersive audio, working with Marr and why decentralised collaborations might be the way forward.

This interview will self-destruct in 10 seconds…

Q&A

Let’s talk about your most recent solo release –  The Vanguard EP.  It doesn’t sound as spywave as some of your previous material… 

Doviak: In my head it is, but in reality it’s not.

One of the tracks, Turn It Over, has a pulsing, ’80s electronic feel – it’s like Howard Jones… 

Doviak: Yeah – there’s all sorts of stuff referenced. Sometimes I’ll be playing around with a riff and it happens to be electronic and I’ll just go with that. I might try and make it something that you might even hear on the radio…

With a pop sensibility….

Doviak: That’s the idea. It’s fun doing all these mysterious tracks, but if nobody listens to them, it’s a bit demoralising. That’s not to say I’m doing things just to get radio play, because that doesn’t really work either. I like pop. To me, Turn It Over is trying to be an intellectual version of a really crass pop track. All of the lyrics in 90 percent of pop stuff are silly that’s what they’re meant to be and that’s why they sell, but if you like lyrics, they’re not very engaging. I like the idea of having that production but with something more quirky.

‘Turn It Over is trying to be an intellectual version of a really crass pop track. All of the lyrics in 90 percent of pop stuff are silly’

 

The Courtyard, which is on the EP, is darker and a much more cinematic track…

Doviak: It’s an electro-goth thing.

It reminds me of Depeche Mode…

Doviak: That comparison comes up a lot – people always say it. The funny thing about that is I never listen to Depeche Mode – I hardly know any of their stuff, but that’s what it’s supposed to be like – dark, low vocals, and moody with goth reverb.

There’s a song on the EP called Price of a Soul – I’m surprised Depeche Mode haven’t written a song called that…

Doviak: Yeah – trying to find any title that some fucker hasn’t used is almost impossible.

Wait For The World is an anthemic ballad – it has synths on it, but is more guitary and less electronic than some of your other songs…

Doviak: That’s right – the song dictated it. With some songs, there is a core tune – with melody, lyrics and chords – that you could play on an acoustic guitar, and it works in its own right, but with others, the production is so integral that it wouldn’t be much good on one. With Wait For The World I thought it was better to follow slightly more traditional instrumentation than a heavily electronic one – it just seemed to work better that way. It’s a really old song – about 10 years old. I just had to get it out eventually.

Would you say the EP is themed?

Doviak: Only because it’s electronic, but, also, because, in my head, the lyrics are about people’s relationship with the internet, social media and new tech. It’s this thing that’s been foisted upon us  – this revolution – and we’re learning how to navigate this world.

Are you a fan of AI in music?

Doviak: I’m not a fan of it but I recognise the fact that it’s not going to go away and its presence is only ever going to increase. It’s like better than the devil you know…

That’s a Kylie song…

Doviak: (laughs) Exactly – that’s a good reference… If AI is a tool that you can leverage to improve what you’re doing and make it more interesting then why not? I don’t think you should get rid of the human element, but some aspects of it will disappear. There will always be people who want that human element – I think that’s fundamentally why people like music. Anthropologists argue that singing is like bird song – it’s a way to show your sexual proclivity.

 ‘I’m not a fan of AI but I recognise the fact that it’s not going to go away and its presence is only ever going to increase’

Maybe singing evolved before language, but I’m not saying that’s the case… There’s an emotional element that connects with you for some reason – some people like certain genres – but some of it is more instinctive. That will always be there, but some people don’t really care about music – it’s just a thing in the background. They’re not going to care if it’s AI music playing in a coffee shop, but there are a hardcore group who will and they like real people… Some elements of pop aren’t just about the music you’re buying into the personality and the imagery as well…

I have no problem if you run an AI music program and you get an idea from it. If the whole thing sounds great and you want to put it out, whatever, but I think it will be a long time before that happens frequently.

What are your views on Dolby Atmos and immersive audio? Some producers see it as a gimmick – do the possibilities interest you?

Doviak: It is gimmicky but, again, it’s another thing that will be around… I don’t know if you know this, but Apple Music prioritise your stuff in their store if you have Dolby Atmos mixes…

Because they want to sell headphones…

Doviak: Yeah. It not’s a bad thing, but I don’t think it’s particularly necessary.  Look at how must people consume music – 70 percent of it is through a tiny, tinny speaker on their phone. Some people have amazing systems to sit and listen to, which is great, but that’s the minority…
I’m not against it, but it’s time, and how much time do you want to dedicate to learning how to mix in Atmos? If someone wants to mix it for me, great… I might look into it at some point, but it’s not a priority. I’m not against it.

You worked on a recent track called Ghost In The Room with a group called Moontalkers. How did that come about?

Doviak: It was straightforward – they just got in touch out of the blue and asked if I’d be interested. It seemed like fun and it was great to just do vocals on something rather than having to produce all the music too. Plus it’s interesting and fun to be working with younger musicians.

Your song Venus Eye Honeytrap was inspired by the story of Mata Hari, wasn’t it?

Doviak: Yes – that’s right, but the lyrics have their own subtext. I think she was accused of being a spy, but I don’t think she was probably. The song was actually more inspired by noodling around, but the overall aesthetic of it is just a distillation of the things I like – The Horrors and any slightly dark, gothic band, but I don’t like to stray into true gothic territory – it has more of a rock element.

It sounds like Gary Numan doing a theme song for a spy film…

Doviak: I think that’s a good description.

Your singing voice reminds me of Numan at times…

Doviak: On certain songs, it’s a deliberate choice to get more robotic than soulful. If I get the melody right and I have a very emotive piece of music with a tune that’s quite sweet, I want to upset that with something that’s a bit colder and dispassionate – to me it’s the right side of melodrama, because I’m not a big fan of very emotional and heartfelt singing generally. Sometimes it’s amazing, but it can get on your nerves a little bit… it just isn’t my thing. For me, it’s more interesting to have a robot sing a heartfelt melody.

Which is essentially what Kraftwerk did…

Doviak: Sure.

‘If I get the melody right and I have a very emotive piece of music with a tune that’s quite sweet, I want to upset that with something that’s a bit colder and dispassionate’

Alicia Vigil of L.A. rock band Vigil of War guests on Venus Eye Honeytrap. How did that come about?

Doviak: She’s a friend of a friend, who I worked with. I was in town, and we did some writing – we kicked around some ideas. Whether anything will see the light of day, I’ve no idea, but it was fun. I don’t do much writing [with other people] outside of my work with Johnny. I’ve done production and mixing, but not a great deal of writing.

Would you like to do more?

Doviak: Yes – that’s what I enjoy the most. The production and the writing are kind of tied together to some degree… I like it a lot more than mixing and engineering, which I don’t really enjoy. They all have positives and negatives, but the thing I really like is writing – it excites me the most by far.

There is an underlying Cold War theme to a lot of your solo music and it’s very cinematic. Have you written soundtracks? I know you’ve been involved with music for adverts…

Doviak:  Yeah – I have done, but not for a while. I’ve been too busy – there was a point where I was doing The Messenger album with Johnny and touring… We had a lot of production stuff to work out, because it was the first time we’d really gone out, and I was doing a lot of work for TV adverts. It started to take off, but I had to make a choice, so I did the live thing because it was more fun, and I got to see the world, play gigs and work with Johnny, which was great. I tried to do both for a little bit, but it wasn’t really happening – something was going to suffer…

Would you like to do film soundtracks? Some of the tracks you’ve done with Johnny, like Walk Into The Sea and Rubicon, are more like soundscapes than traditional rock or pop songs, aren’t they?

Doviak: Absolutely – that’s right. I like to have some sort of balance – if I was going to see a gig, what songs would I want it to contain? It’s nice to have a general thread of something running through it. Sometimes you want to hear a couple of up-tempo, catchy, straightforward songs with choruses, but then you might want a lull with some emotive stuff. Not everyone wants that – a lot of the audiences respond better to the up-tempo, catchy singles and they jump around and sing the lyrics – but I think they’re also impressed by the soundtracky stuff, and the people that like it really like it.

Where does your love of the Cold War come from?

Doviak: Probably from watching films. It’s not something I’ve always been into. I had a whole bunch of songs kicking around for many years, but with no real defining element to them, but at some point I thought it would be fun to do something John Barryesque – I’d liked Portishead and the idea of doing melodramatic orchestration. There are particular harmonies that are unique to that genre – there’s an element of melancholy. It’s not so much sadness, but more of a bleak melancholy…

Like Barry’s soundtrack to The Ipcress File

Doviak: Exactly.

Johnny and the band used to walk on stage to the theme from The Persuaders

Doviak: We did actually – that’s right. It’s a good piece of music.

Did you write your Enemy Numbers EP while you were travelling around Europe?

Doviak: Exactly – the impetus came from different places, and I liked the idea… If I’d had the budget, I could have done themed videos for the cities they were related to – Berlin, Paris, Hamburg, Prague… I had some brief ideas while I was on the road, but I didn’t have the time to expand on them until I got home. The emotion still remains – a set of chords and a simple melody, but that’s enough and it’s something to build on. If it’s the right thing, it sparks my imagination, and I can go back and build on it with that in mind. I’m lucky to be able to travel, and it’s a great way of doing it.

I see so many cities and I got to thinking what would it be like if you were a guy listening to a shortwave radio by yourself, in a room at night, with a different identity – it could be a strange, lonely experience. That’s why there’s a sadness to the music – slightly bleak and melancholy, but without being overly melodramatic.

Did you write Century in Montmartre, Paris?

Doviak: Yes – the chords and the basic tune. The idea is that there’s some guy in a room by himself, feeling melancholy and looking over the rooftops of Paris. It’s particularly scenic round there.

Do you have a home studio?

Doviak: Yes – it’s basic, but it’s enough for me to do what I need to do.

So, you record all your solo stuff there?

Doviak: Yeah, but Jack [Mitchell – Johnny Marr’s drummer] played on a couple of the early songs, Solid State Machines and Enemy Numbers, so we recorded his drums elsewhere. I’d do that again, but it hasn’t been convenient and for some of the recent songs it hasn’t really been necessary.

Do you have a big collection of vintage gear, like old synths?

Doviak: Not as big as I’d like – one of the reasons is because I have to travel so much and the other is because software is getting so good. Some of it sounds as good as the real thing – certainly by the time you’ve done various things to it production-wise and put it in the mix. We have a whole bunch of stuff in Johnny’s studio – a Juno, a Moog, a Yamaha SS30…

Johnny explored electronic music with Bernard Sumner in Electronic and then when he had his band The Healers he went back to more traditional rock, blues and psychedelic stuff. Do you think working with you on his solo records has made him experiment with more electronic sounds again?

Doviak: With the more electronic tracks like Spirit, Power and Soul, and Armatopia, that’s what he wanted to do – he already had those ideas. There may be one or two songs where I’ve said, ‘You could put a dirty Juno bass on there…’ or something. I can’t remember – he remembers that stuff brilliantly.

You’ve been putting out your solo songs and EPs digitally. Any plans to make an album one day?

Doviak: Yes – it’s a nice way of tying tracks together thematically and having them all released at the same time. From a more cynical point of view, it’s also better for marketing, or so I’m told – it’s easier to get more people on your side, like the press, if you’ve got a product out. I’d like to do it but my time’s limited…

Apart from during Covid, you’ve been so busy with Johnny’s albums and touring…

I know… and during Covid we were writing the last album, which has 16 tracks on it. We wrote about 20. In an ideal world, I’d have a situation where I could bang each of my tracks down in six months to a year and do an album. I think it’s more consistent that way.

What’s the process like when you and Johnny work on tracks together? Does he give you demos or do you both come up with ideas in the studio and layer stuff up?

Doviak: It’s kind of a mixture – we might have ideas for a song and once we start working on it, it can take twists and turns and end up nothing like the original – in my mind, the music is 75 percent Johnny, something like that… I tend to do more of the drums, the bass and keyboard stuff.

‘What if you were a guy listening to a shortwave radio by yourself, in a room at night, with a different identity – it could be a strange, lonely experience. That’s why there’s a sadness to the music’

Have you got a lot of unreleased solo stuff?

Doviak: Yes, I have. I’ve always written and recorded, and it’s 80 percent ready to go. That final 20 percent is a killer sometimes – you have to mix it and master it, and that takes a lot of time. It’s very beneficial to have another pair of ears on it. When you’re doing everything yourself, you’re very close to the song and you can’t see the wood for the trees. That’s where collaboration comes in handy. If you’re in a band, you kick ideas around in a rehearsal room… The one thing I don’t like about writing by myself is that it’s quite isolating and boring – I like being with other people, talking and having a laugh while I’m working.

I really like your song Don’t Follow – it has ‘80s synths on it and electronic drums. It reminds me of Duran Duran when they did The Chauffeur, as well as Howard Jones and Ryuichi Sakamoto…

Doviak: That one’s had a good response – mainly because I think it’s more of an identifiable genre.

It could’ve come off the soundtrack to Drive

Doviak: Exactly.

One of my favourite songs of yours is Russian Dolls – it’s very dramatic. Do you remember a ‘90s band called Rialto, who were influenced by John Barry and Ennio Morricone? It reminds me of them… 

Doviak: I remember the name…  I’d had the song knocking around for ages – the idea and a piano riff. It got tweaked over time – I struggled with the chorus – but it’s very John Barry / Ipcress File. It’s spywave, with almost Persuaders-like guitars.

Where did you grow up?

Doviak: In Cambridge.

There’s a spy connection there right away…

Doviak: Exactly.

Were you always in bands when you were young and how did you end up working with Johnny Marr?

Doviak: I was always in bands until I moved to Manchester, but I had a lot of friends in music, and I was involved with it. It’s a long story – I had a friend in a band in Manchester called Alpinestars, who said: ‘We’re going on tour – why don’t you come along just for a laugh?’ I worked as a guitar tech, which I’d never done. One of the guys in the band knew Johnny vaguely and we got in contact, met up and played some guitar – it went from there.

So, what are your plans for the rest of the year?

Doviak: I like the idea of working out a way of doing decentralised collaborations. I don’t even know what means yet, but it sounds good, and if you say the word ‘blockchain’ with it, people will probably think it’s interesting.  It’s if you have an idea and you put it out there online in some format – you could choose people to work with, or maybe anybody could do it and develop it in their own way.

And you’ll be doing another record with Johnny?

Doviak: Probably soon – he’s been crazy busy. It’s been nuts.

Follow Doviak on Instagram, X and YouTube.

For Johnny Marr tour dates and info, visit:  https://johnnymarr.com/

 

‘Writing the songs was a way of me getting my shit out without having to go and speak to people’

Photo: Dean Chalkley

 

Easy Tiger, the debut solo album by singer-songwriter, multi-instrumentalist and producer, Kitty Liv, who is one third of the acclaimed family band, Kitty, Daisy & Lewis, almost didn’t see the light of day.

The songs were originally intended to be for her ears only, but after a few drinks at a dinner party, she played some of the tracks to her older brother, producer and analogue guru, Lewis Durham, who said she had to do something with them. 

God bless the power of alcohol, because it would’ve been such a shame if these songs had remained as private demos on Liv’s laptop, because Easy Tiger is one of the freshest and strongest debuts of the year, with a wide range of influences, from rock ‘n’ roll, soul, blues and gospel, to contemporary pop, hip-hop and the ’90s R ‘n’ B of Erykah Badu and D’Angelo. 

Written and recorded over a five-year period, and co-produced by Liv and Durham, it’s a very personal and autobiographical record that documents the highs and lows of her first major relationship, which ended in a breakup.

She’s in a much better place now, she tells Say it With Garage Flowers, as we sit down to talk to her at the piano in Durham Sound Studios, the family’s analogue HQ in North London’s Kentish Town, which is where the record was made.

“I didn’t set out to make an album, but, in a way, it turned into a kind of concept record,” she explains. “Fast forward to now and all of that is very much in the past, but the songs remain very much what they are…”

Q&A

Let’s talk about how the new album came about – you’d taken a break from playing with Kitty, Daisy & Lewis…

Kitty Liv: I think the last tour we did was in 2018, in Germany – Daisy was about eight months pregnant, maybe more, which was pretty incredible. When she had her second daughter, we took a break from gigging, and I found I had a bit more time on my hands.

I’d been covertly writing some stuff, but I didn’t let anyone know about it – it wasn’t anything that I intended to show to anyone. I’d come home, sit down and muck around… (she plays some random notes on the piano we are sat at.)

So, do you write on piano and guitar?

KL: Mainly guitar, but for this record, I did write a couple of tunes on piano, which I hadn’t done much of before. I’m not really a piano player – it’s not my strong point, but I love it. There’s stuff you can do on a piano that you can’t do on a guitar, and I like messing around and figuring out chords. My naivety on the piano probably led to me writing some of that stuff, which is quite cool.

Nothing On My Mind (But You Babe), from the new album, was written on piano, wasn’t it?

KL: It was [she plays a snatch of it on the piano].

The rhythm was inspired by listening to funky hip-hop… 

KL: Yeah there was a bit of that.

You recorded demos on your laptop, didn’t you?

KL: Yeah – I’d come down here and I’d lay down a drum beat and piece some stuff together. They were songs that I didn’t really think were right for KDL – the family band. I made the demos, and I enjoyed listening to them, but I didn’t intend to play them to anyone. A little while after that, we were having a dinner party, and I ended up playing them to Lewis – we’d had a few drinks…

I think the album will surprise people who know Kitty, Daisy & Lewis – there’s a wide range of styles and influences on it…

KL: Yeah – it’s a big mishmash of stuff that I enjoy playing.

People know Kitty, Daisy & Lewis for traditional music: blues, ‘rock ‘n’ roll, rhythm and blues, ska and soul, but on this album you’ve also embraced ‘90s R ‘n’ B, like Erykah Badu and D’Angelo, as well as gospel…

KL: The songs just fell out of me and they all have that R ‘n’ B / soul thread.

And there’s a hip-hop influence too…

KL: I was listening to a lot of it at the time and obviously that came out. When you’re influenced by something in the moment, it comes out, and then you move on to something that, but you don’t forget about it – you bank it… Everything I’ve ever written has been an accumulation of things I’ve picked up as I’ve grown up – I grew up with a lot of blues and jazz…

Was Neck On The Line the track that started off your batch of songwriting for what would become the album?

KL: Yeah. I started off writing an upbeat rock ‘n’ roll tune and I was also listening to D’Angelo at the time – the two genres started to merge and that song was the result of it.

‘I didn’t set out to make an album, but, in a way, it turned into a kind of concept record’

Photo: Dean Chalkley

The album sees you wearing your heart on your sleeve – it was written throughout the course and the breakup of your first major relationship, and a lot of the songs deal with that. It almost feels like a concept album…

KL: Yeah – I didn’t set out to make an album, but, in a way, it turned into a kind of concept record.

Fast forward to now and all of that is very much in the past, but the songs remain very much what they are…

Was making the record cathartic?

KL: Yeah – I made it during the period I was with that person, and writing the songs was a way of me getting my shit out without having to go and speak to people.

Being a musician, you can do that – it’s cheaper than going to a therapist…

KL: Exactly. When we made the record, we went back and re-did quite a lot of stuff, because I felt that with the early versions the songs hadn’t quite found their feet.

I went out on a long tour with Beans On Toast and played a lot – Lewis and I produced an album for him in 2019, I think it was…

We did a run of shows with him, and a few years later he got The Mystery Jets to produce one of his albums – he said he had Jack [Flanagan], who was the bass player in The Mystery Jets, in the band, and did I want to come and play bass? Jack was playing guitar…

The only condition was that Beans On Toast wanted me to support him as well – I’d never done that before, so I was like, ‘Oh my God…’ but it seemed silly to pass up the opportunity, and it would definitely push me out of my comfort zone, and I could sing these songs in-front of people… So, I was grateful to him for asking me to do that – it made me learn the songs, and I went back to the studio and re-recorded them.

The song The River That Flows, which is on the album, originally came out on an EP in 2021, but it’s a much more stripped-down version…

KL: Yeah – when we were going out on tour, after a gig, people would say, ‘Where can I hear your music?’ but I didn’t have anything. I wanted a CD to give people, so I quickly recorded something before we went out on tour. I’d written that song just before we recorded it – it was new and fresh.

The River That Flows deals with depression and trying to move forward and carry on with your life. On the album it has a classic ’60s soul feel  – Atlantic or Stax – with a lilting melody and strings… 

KL: Oh, great it’s interesting because it’s probably the song that’s a bit different from the rest in terms of the genres. It’s more where I came from… my background… that one and Keep Your Head Up High. Those are the two songs about lifting yourself up and realising that somebody else isn’t responsible for you and the way that you feel you’re responsible for that. It was a realisation of that.

Photo: Dean Chalkley

And then you need to go and see The Doctor… That’s a song about relationship difficulties and it uses a metaphor – it’s about avoiding your problems… 

KL: Yeah – ‘the doctor’ is very much a metaphor for many things at the time, my partner’s dad was a GP,  so that was one element – it was a bit of a cheeky joke… You can also interpret it as being about a therapist… I think that song has many meanings… It’s for the listener to make their own mind up – there are more literal songs on the record.

So, playing on the album you’ve got the Royal Organ Duo (Adrian Meehan – drums and Rich Milner – organ and keyboards) and Lewis on bass…

KL: Yeah – the four of us played live in here, and I played guitar… I rewrote some of the basslines and I played bass on half the record. A few of the songs are Moog-based, which is an important part of the album…

There’s a fat synth sound on some tracks. Did you play that?

KL: Yeah – because we got the initial takes of us playing live… There was a time when I thought I could play the drums to a click and layer it up there from there, but I didn’t really want to do that – it was a bit boring, and I wanted to enjoy what I was doing while I was doing it. It was a lot more fun.

Ade and Rich are good friends of mine, and they were into the music – they were like, ‘Yeah – let’s do it! Let’s make this record…’ I’m really grateful to them. After I did the Beans On Toast thing, Jack and I got together and he started playing drums…

I saw him playing with you at the Lexington in London earlier this year…

KL: Yeah – that was the first tour he did. We did a few dates in Germany, and London was the last one – that tour was amazing. I didn’t know how it would go down. A lot of the people were KDL fans – we have our biggest following in Germany – but I hadn’t put much music out… Was anyone going to show up? But it was brilliant.

The Sun and The Rain deals with the ups and downs of a relationship. Did you write the verse as a rap? Was it an outpouring of your subconscious?

KL: Yeah –  I think it’s when your brain is a bit scatty and you’re contradicting yourself the whole time: ‘This happened, that happened, but at the end of the day it’s alright…’

I was having a conversation with myself and I had to organise all my thoughts and make them into a rhyming thing. It sort of fell out of me as a rap.

There’s a key change and in the bridge it becomes a gospel song, with organ. It’s like two songs melded into one…

KL: For me, the bridge is a ray of hope – an enlightening moment…

And there’s some fat and squelchy Moog synth on the track…

KL: Yeah –  all of that was an absolute joy to put on afterwards once we’d done the initial take. I’m really happy with the way that particular recording turned out.

Sweet Dreams, which was the first single and opens the album, has a funky, smooth soul groove. It’s quite a sultry and low-key way to start the record…

KL:  I think the original track listing started with Keep Your Head Up High but I wanted to end on that…

It works well, because it’s a positive song. If you’d ended with the penultimate track, Passing You By, instead, which is a very personal song and quite sad, that could’ve been a bit of a downer…

KL: Chronologically, that would’ve made sense, ‘cos it’s the last song I wrote and it sums it up, but I think ending the record with Keep Your Head Up High was a good move.

Passing You By is a sad song –  it’s written from the point of view of you walking past the flat where you and your ex used to live, but he’s now living there with another woman –  but it has a charm about it. It’s not as angry or as dark as it could be…

KL: It’s playful.

It was written on a Spanish guitar that you also used on the recording, wasn’t it?

KL: Yeah –  it was recorded in one take. That was the only song when I did the vocals while I was playing the guitar. We didn’t really even have to mix it, as it was just two instruments, and then we got the string players in.

‘Lewis was good at giving me direction – ‘You’ve got to get the feeling out there – you’ve got to fucking sing these lyrics and get the story across”

 

Photo: Dean Chalkley

With the rest of the songs, we recorded the band and then did all the embellishments and overdubs, and then when it was time to do the vocals, I struggled to do some of them because I wasn’t in that place I was when I wrote the songs – you’ve got to gear yourself up to get back in that headspace and try and capture a performance. It was a transition period of getting over it.

I’d do a take and it would sound nice and be in tune, but Lewis would say, ‘It’s functional, but it hasn’t got the vibe – that one has…’ I’d say, ‘Yeah, but it’s a bit pitchy….’ And he’d say, ‘I don’t care….’

Lewis was good at giving me direction – ‘You’ve got to get the feeling out there – you’ve got to fucking sing these lyrics and get the story across.’ He kept reminding me of that.

Keep Your Head Up High is a positive song. Did you write it for yourself as a mantra?

KL: Yeah. It’s interesting because people come up to me after my gigs and say, ‘Oh, fucking hell –  that song really spoke to me. I needed to hear that,’ which is really touching.

The harmonica playing, which you’re known for, is at the fore on that track…

KL: That’s kind of the reason I wanted to end the record with it – it’s me signing off, and saying: ‘Its going to be alright whatever shit you’ve had to endure, this is it…’

Comin’ Up has a laidback soul groove and is about going out a lot in your early twenties – the vocals have a hungover feel. It has a ‘coming down on a Sunday morning’ vibe..

KL: Yeah –  it’s definitely a comedown song, but still very floaty…

Lately was partly inspired by a riff from Al Green’s Love and Happiness

KL: Definitely. It’s one of those songs that gets everyone going, whether you know what it is or not. I feel like a lot of young people would know the song but they wouldn’t know who it is they’d just recognise it and say, ‘Oh, that’s one of those funky soul songs…’ It starts off with that riff and then the rhythm carries it on. It has a really long outro where he’s ad-libbing over the top, and then the horns come in… I’ve always loved that song.

You wrote Lately about having a sleepless night on the sofa while your boyfriend at the time was sleeping soundly in the room next door…

KL: Yeah – he came in in the morning, heard me writing it and said, ‘It’s not about me, is it?’ I was like: ‘Definitely not – it’s fictional….’ (laughs).

‘The album feels like a huge deal. All of a sudden it was: ‘Fuck! We’re making a go of it, we’re doing a solo record…’ 

The verses have an edge to them, but the chorus, with strings, is sweeter – there’s light and darkness in the song…

KL: Definitely – that’s a good way of putting it. It’s frustration and anger – ‘for fuck’s sake, c’mon!’ – but the chorus is: ‘I give up – what’s the point?’

Did you get to keep the sofa?

KL: No I left it there.

So, are you pleased with the record? 

KL: I am. It’s a different side to my personality that people weren’t aware of – or maybe I wasn’t aware of. It’s fun to dip your fingers into different pies, try out different things and make different kinds of music. We’re lucky to be able to do that here in the studio – people come in with all kinds of music and we get to work on it with them. That was definitely helpful when we came to make my record – we learnt a few things.

Photo: Dean Chalkley

‘The album shows a different side to my personality that people weren’t aware of – or maybe I wasn’t aware of. It’s fun to try out different things’

How does it feel to be getting your first solo album out there?

KL: It feels like a huge deal for me – especially as I didn’t set out to do it. All of a sudden it was: ‘Fuck! We’re making a go of it, we’re doing a solo record…’

One of the interesting things I’ve seen is KDL fans saying, ‘Why has she left the band?’ I don’t know where they’re getting their information from. I don’t want you to listen to it with an agenda – if you like it you like it, and if you don’t, that’s fine.

Do you think it will attract new fans who don’t know Kitty, Daisy & Lewis?

KL: Definitely. I’ve had different people come to the gigs – people who aren’t aware of KDL, which is great. Maybe they’ll discover KDL through it.

The interesting thing about KDL is that we have people from all different walks of life and all ages come to our gigs, which is nice, but, there are certain people, and I think it’s some of the older men, who are like, ‘Why is she doing this and kicked her siblings out?’ All this random stuff.

At first, I thought, ‘That’s a shame that they’ve jumped to conclusions…’ but now it’s actually quite nice that people care that much. I’ve turned it into something positive in my head. When we do put out another KDL album, which there will be, then hopefully they’ll be pleasantly surprised.

Easy Tiger is released on July 26 (Sunday Best). It’s available on Indian Pink or Tiger’s Eye vinyl (both come with a poster) and CD.

To celebrate the album’s release, Kitty Liv will be playing a series of in-stores around the release 

  • Weds July 31:    Rough Trade East (Full Band)
  • Thurs August 1 : Banquet, Kingston (Solo)
  • Fri August 2:     Pie & Vinyl, Portsmouth (Solo)
  • Mon August 5: Black Circle, Leighton Buzzard (Solo)
  • Tues  August 6: Vinyl Tap, Huddersfield (Solo)
  • Weds August 7: Jacaranda, Liverpool (Solo or Full Band)
  • Thur August 8:  Spillers, Cardiff (Solo)

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