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Выбрана рубрика Interviews.


Другие рубрики в этом дневнике: Video(49), Songs & albums(38), Photo(68), News(53), Lyrics(5), Live shows(31), Icons, wallpapers, fanart(13), Downloads(18)

С Днем Св. Патрика!

Дневник

Воскресенье, 17 Марта 2013 г. 17:39 + в цитатник
--IAM-- (patrick_wolf_gang) все записи автора

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В честь праздника слушаем вчерашнее часовое интерью с приветами от РашнВулфпака и от меня:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b01rbqyz

1937239_Photo34jpgpatrickwolf_kopiya (400x267, 107Kb)

 

Рубрики:  Photo
Interviews

Drunkest interview ever + Live on BBC2

Дневник

Воскресенье, 02 Сентября 2012 г. 12:10 + в цитатник
--IAM-- (patrick_wolf_gang) все записи автора



Live on BBC2 (вчера) 

01 Overture

http://www.mediafire.com/?2b5v1cduy1up90c

02 Born to Die (Lana Del Ray cover)

http://www.mediafire.com/?qchpaydcl6tzb8t

Full download (songs & interview); http://www.mediafire.com/?xc1h7bm5tfdqb6b

1937239_tumblr_m9bi3jqUb21r2bkv0o1_500 (345x334, 112Kb)

Рубрики:  Live shows
Video
Songs & albums
Interviews

Wylde Magazine #2 (статья + интервью)

Дневник

Четверг, 17 Мая 2012 г. 23:40 + в цитатник
--IAM-- (patrick_wolf_gang) все записи автора

 

WHO'S AFRAID OF PATRICK WOLF?

FROM CHILD PRODIGY TO KNIFE-WIELDING, GENRE-BUSTING, BULLY-BAITING CHAMELEON, PATRICK WOLF HAS NEVER TAKEN THE EASY ROUTE. AS HE EDGES CLOSER TO THE MAINSTREAM, PIPPA BROOKS ASKS: IS THE MAINSTREAM READY FOR PATRICK WOLF?

Patrick Wolf

Patrick Wolf is an artist who wears his heart bravely on his sleeve: his self-creation is an ongoing evolution entirely of his own making. There are no stylists, there’s no “media training”, just a strong desire to express, experiment and create something true, which doesn’t repeat itself and stands the test of time. At 28, having released album number five, Lupercalia, in June 2011, Wolf’s heroic trajectory represents a world of musical influences and collaborations from digital hardcore to folk, Marianne Faithfull to Tilda Swinton. Sometimes his diversifications have left fans and critics bewildered and even resentful – defying categorisation isn’t playing the game, which is about staying comfortably in your box.

I first noticed Patrick when he was practically still a child. At 12 and 13 he would swagger past the doormen at The Garage in Islington, all fur coat and attitude. My band, Posh, were on the indie circuit at the time and Patrick would show up at gigs and festivals with his sister Jo. He stood out; still childlike and shy, but burning with a desire to be part of a music scene that had wrenched him from his classical background. It wasn’t long before he took to the stage himself; his sister would press “play” on the four-track and he would play his car-boot-sale musical finds. Though he cringes about his musical output from those days, there was discernible drive and ambition. This bravado saw him join music collective Minty at 14 – 14! – and start to perform and collaborate with the characters he met on that Offset scene. That he was “different” isn’t really in question. As a child, his day-to-day pursuits had been considerably more erudite than most: “Thinking about it now, I was singing Catholic evensong three nights a week and I was being classically trained on the violin. I guess other young boys were kicking a football about!”

I meet Patrick for our interview on a cold, wet January night. He’s sipping sloe gin made by his dad and comfort-eating his aunty’s Christmas pudding. The house is full of spicy fumes and banter. Curled up in an armchair “found on the street”, in the cosily lit, tapestry-peppered love nest he shares with his boyfriend, William, Patrick reminisces with a smile about growing up and finding his way and his voice – although the journey has clearly been difficult at times. If you are bullied, as Patrick was by his contemporaries, you have to find a way to turn the hate back on itself, make it a positive. Learning to toughen up in the playground must have helped him hit the London scene with the fairly aggressive verve that was characteristic of his youth. Running with the Kashpoint (Matthew Glamorre’s early-Noughties club) crowd, where everyone was a performer – even if it was only on the dance floor – meant you had to fight to stand out. “I’ve bumped into a lot of people from my Disco Monster days, people I had fist fights with, who were sworn enemies, from different tribes – it was daggers at dawn! Suddenly, six years later, you’re in a bar and you’re laughing about that time. I love that I had all those moments. It was fun to have that kind of history with those people.” 

It’s funny to think about Patrick raging around London then when, right now, he seems so at peace with himself. “I’m just not that kind of person any more. I think empathy is really important now. When you’re bullied at school you’re told it’s because they’re jealous, and you have to think about that now; if you hate somebody, maybe it’s because they have something that you secretly want.”

The musical manifestation of this youthful aggression was the band Maison Crimineaux, which Patrick formed with Fanny Paul Clinton. “It was 2001, I had a lot of time on my hands and was making lots of demos. I had so much ambition. We didn’t like London at all but we were stuck here. Everything was so zhuzhy. There were no nightclubs we wanted to go to – it was all members’ clubs. I was working in Camden Market sewing on buttons, stuck in a little room, living on £30 or £40 a week… Fanny had a performance coming up at [early-Noughties club] Show Off and he commissioned me two days beforehand to compose some music for it. Fanny was a performance artist and wanted to cause trouble. His show was called KFC and he bought six boxes of fried chicken to throw at the audience! We had so much fun we made a band of it.”

I saw a few of their shows; on one occasion, Patrick pulled the chair out from under a man who was sitting with his back to the stage, and on another the management literally pulled the plug on the sound after only a few minutes. “Our goal after a couple of shows was to be thrown out of a venue within two songs but still get paid. We wanted to cause a bad reaction, but not through bad music; our aesthetic was baroque harpsichord music, Diamanda Galás samples and white noise. We were really obsessed with Atari Teenage Riot and we wanted all the people standing there with their fancy cocktails to feel sick and angry. We wanted to challenge people.” And they did. A formidable duo, they would make an impact just walking through the door, dripping in diamanté, second-hand furs and homemade clothes. When they were coming at you with a microphone it was a challenging experience – too much, in fact, for the world to be ready for, but a brilliant moment in London nightlife as well as in the evolution of Patrick Wolf: “It was great to have that adolescent moment as a band. I really needed to go through Maison Crimineaux with Fanny, I needed to have that ‘Fuck You’ time.” 

Despite the punk aesthetic of Maison Crimineaux, the classical element has never been far away from everything musical Patrick touches. A live performance sees him crisscrossing the stage, sitting at an organ, thrashing like a dervish on his viola, strumming the ukelele or even seated at his harp. The virtuoso element of his talent should never be played down. Like Dolly Parton – who blew me away in concert as she effortlessly switched between the banjo, guitar, harmonica or autoharp – you feel that Patrick could make a beautiful sound come out of any musical instrument. While Dolly comes from a country-music tradition, a lot of Patrick’s output is influenced by folk and his Cornish and Irish roots. Add to that the unmistakable voice, the stories he tells and the fact that music seems to be his driving life-force, as opposed to just a chosen career, and you have an artist whose recordings to date must only be the tip of the creative iceberg. It’s striking that he equates his love of music to a first romance: “You know, the first thing I fell in love with was electronic instruments! In 1997 there weren’t really any magazines about them, the internet was there but not like today, so little information about Moog synthesisers, theremins, any electronic or analogue synthesisers from the Seventies – and, remember in the Nineties, the Seventies were still thought of as kinda cheesy and associated with Prog Rock, not vintage and cool as they’re thought of now – so I had to order stuff through PO Box addresses. I’d scour Loot. I had a Pulp calendar, and every couple of months I wrote “Find a Moog! Buy a Moog!” It was so exotic, so from another planet, the sound, and because of the lack of information… So my first crush was this escapism through music. Maybe if I were 12 now, with information so much more freely available, I wouldn’t find so much fantasy in it.”

Patrick recorded his first album, Lycanthropy, in 2003. His début is like “my Dorian Gray” and he has had a love/hate relationship with it, not least because “I always think it’s scary that there are people who think there’s this Patrick Wolf I created back then that I’m straying away from in some way. It was made at a time in my life when things happened that I never want to go through again, the state of mind I was in at the time… You’d have to be crazy to want to be reliving those things at 28.” Certainly, the waif-like, elfin figure who sang songs with a heavy heart hit home with a hardcore of fans who “went to my music because they were crying on the bus on the way home from school”. With Wind in the Wires, Patrick was keen to distance himself from that first album, even saying he wished he’d never recorded it – although now he can see that there wouldn’t have been the second without going through making the first. But he feels keenly a sense of a certain group of fans who don’t want him to change. “It has a lot to do with youth obsession and not wanting someone to grow old [amazing he can say this at the tender age of 28!]. I’m not going to go back to wearing hot pants! I’m just growing my first beard! It’s taken four weeks to get to this but I just feel I’ve come of age in the past year as a singer and performer. There are always people who want you to stay what you were at the start. My mission statement at the beginning was: if you’re going to stick around with my music, be prepared for lots of different faces and sounds. I mean, it’s not a new concept; think of Bowie, Kate Bush or PJ Harvey. I think because there’s youth attached to my early records and we live in a very youth-obsessed society, and people are always looking for the first signs of ageing… I can’t wait to get into my 30s and 40s to see what music I’m making!”

For someone who often changes his appearance quite drastically, at least with every album, there is something of a statement in his “first beard” and there have been other significant physical moments for Patrick, such as when his voice broke, and the choirboy was gone. He had to search for another voice. That was the moment he discovered Punk, Rock’n’Roll, New Wave. “Hitting puberty was a really important, exciting time… I kind of grew away from everybody, everyone at school. It was around ’97 and that was when I started going to see live bands for the first time.” It was also the moment he became brave; the fact that he was never asked his age as he barged into gigs is significant, as is the way he carried himself at that young age.

Coming of age should be the moment you spread your wings but in a sense Patrick had already been flexing his freedom for years. “The moment I turned 18 it just got boring.” He left home at 16 and lived a fairly hand-to-mouth existence, busking and making demos before Capitol K released his first album. “When you’re 18 or 19, of course you’re going to set yourself up with quotes that haunt you when you’re 28 or 29. I’ve had so much shit from people because I don’t subscribe to the traditional way of being, looking or speaking that I ‘should’ as a singer-songwriter. I rarely get taken seriously in the press as a producer or songwriter because I think they’re bewildered by the packaging or the video or the things I say.” His videos have seen Patrick on all fours wearing nothing but a harness, writhing in the shadows and being choked by a whip in Vulture… but also cavorting on a perfect beach with a cast of good-looking extras in The City who wouldn’t look out of place skipping behind Elton John in I’m Still Standing. So there’s an element of the press that don’t get him: “I’m like Katie Price: love me or hate me!” 

It’s interesting that with the new album, he’s broken Radio 2, so lots of people are coming to his music for the first time. Uplifting, romantic and irresistibly euphoric, it’s his most commercial album since 2007’s The Magic Position but it’s “much more about calmness or peace. I feel like I’ve reached a new emotional platform. Some of the other albums are about a lack of love or emotional stability thematically and this album is a big slap in the face to all of those. A lot of artists like to hide their meaning in enigma, or a very British sarcasm or cynicism, and I’m not like that at all. I’m not about being mysterious.” It’s no secret that with William, who he plans to marry this year, he’s found Big Love and someone to share his life with. There’s often been a sense that he’s “been alone for too many of the great moments in my life” (Blackdown from The Bachelor). Not any more.

One of the great elements of a live show by Patrick Wolf is that, without being preachy, he’ll talk about artists like Derek Jarman or impart a little musical knowledge. I saw him give a brilliant tirade at the Roundhouse a few months ago against c*nts like Duran Duran who ruined the saxophone’s Punk image with smug solos. Even more wonderful was the fact that his dad then came centre stage and tore up his sax like newspaper to prove the point. Patrick doesn’t dumb down. If he wants to talk about a book he loves or an artist who’s influenced him, he respects his audience’s intelligence enough to share it with them. As there’s such a shocking amount of dumbing-down in the music industry today, this makes him all the more unique. He introduced me to mythologist-philosopher Joseph Campbell, who helped him through his teens. “ A Joseph Campbell Companion was the book that changed my way of thinking about my future and the things I could do with the – sometimes – little I had in life. It’s a compilation of some of the best and maybe more uncomplicated quotes from his theoretical writings. His famous book is The Hero With a Thousand Faces and his big theme is to ‘follow your bliss’. His tip is freedom – if there’s something you need to do in your life, however preposterous, imagine this big canyon and don’t be afraid to jump. I’ve never bought a ‘self-help’ book, I’m really averse to all that Oprah, Tyra Banks stuff. I bought it from Watkins book store off Charing Cross Road when I was about 16. I’d told my parents I was taking a teaching course two days a week but I was actually just bumming around. This book really helped me on my journey, leaving home, making music, making the leap. I still have it, a really dog-eared copy. I haven’t needed to dip into it for a few years but over the next year it might help me reassess my ‘mission statement’.”

The singer-songwriter can cut quite a lonely figure, and collaborations must be a welcome spark of inspiration. They don’t come much more inspiring than Patti Smith, with whom Patrick has played live on nine occasions. Patrick tells me his Patti story: how they met, where… “It was at a Dylan Thomas poetry festival in Wales. I was invited to play in the tiny front room of his boathouse. Patti was supposed to play the next day…” Patrick loves telling this story… “All my instruments were in the hotel lobby and she’d just arrived and put out a call to ask if anyone had a spare Dylan Thomas poetry book, and I had one – in fact, it was the one my grandmother left me in her will. I went to the staircase and she was standing there at the top, and she said, ‘Whose instruments are those?’ and I said, ‘Mine.’ And she said, ‘Can you play them?’ ‘Yeah.’ And she was like, ‘Great, let’s do a show.’ She said, ‘What’s your name?’ so I told her, and she just said, ‘I’m Patti.’ It was so great. She taught me four songs in her bedroom and the next day we played in the boathouse and again that night in the town hall. It was all really improvised and nobody really knew what they were doing. I just love that! So many musicians are so precious. You try to do a duet with some, and it’s so complicated. I think from the old Offset days I’m really spontaneous. It’s so thrilling to make spontaneous music or art. I haven’t ever met anybody like Patti in the music industry, who is so exactly how I want to be. She’s timeless, ageless. She turned up with no tour support, wandered through the village with her camera taking photos, falling into conversation with people. She lives with her heart and eyes open. The last few shows I got to play with Lenny Kaye and all the old band. On the last show I did back-up vocals for People Have The Power and Ghost Dance!” I reflect that this story says so much not just about Patti Smith’s lack of pretension, but also Patrick’s fearlessness – not just to perform on the same stage, but to improvise, with no rehearsal, and just get up there and hold your own. With. Patti. Smith. Incredible. 

Strong women have featured large on an inspirational level for Patrick. Recently, he was reflecting on the 10 years since his first EP. One artist he refers to constantly is Joni Mitchell. What had she produced in the first 10 years of her career? “She’d done 10 albums, whereas I’ve done five. It made me feel very lazy. Pretty much everything she’s been through in her career helps me make the next step. Her work is timeless, classic, it exists outside the music industry. She doesn’t need chart positions and fame.”

I love the contradictions that are evident and played out through Patrick’s work: the desire to “vanish” and be “outside the industry” pitched against constant image changes and a desire for attention. It’s what makes him so interesting, endearing and exciting. His fierce intelligence and musicality, teamed with the unpredictability of the next source of inspiration, mean you can never second-guess his next move. And why would you want to? Artists like this don’t come along very often and, five albums down, and with no hint of flagging, Patrick’s only just beginning.

THE WYLDE Questionnaire

Do you collect anything?

Tapestries. I’ve got seven or eight now. I’ve got a really bad version of Gainsborough’s Blue Boy. I love that people spend like, a year making these things and then they end up in a charity shop.

First record you ever bought?

I bought three tapes – Faith No More’s Digging the Grave which came with a sew-on patch that I put on my pencil case. All good...but then in the same week I bought Pet Shop Boys’ Go West and Erasure. I love that Erasure was balanced out by Faith No More!

Would you ever have cosmetic surgery?

Yeah, I’ve got quite a big face so there’s lots I could do with it! I have this trash side that would be fascinated by what would happen if I had a chin-lift or liposuction but then the stubborn side... I’ll have to wait and see.

Do you worry about going bald?

The moment I go bald I’ll just get five pudding-bowl wigs in yellow or red or whatever...

Do you get nervous before a gig?

If it’s over 2,000 people I start to feel it’s a much bigger deal and worry that I might not have the energy to be social and pull out the clown, the person who makes conversation.

Most memorable gig?

The most spectacular, I think, was at the London Palladium. It had a revolving stage, four different backdrops, a folk section, an industrial section... it was all really choreographed.

What songs have you covered?

I’ve done two Nico songs, I sometimes do live versions of a Kate Bush song but, generally, I don’t want to re-record the hits of other people. I always played Nico to my friends and they’d be like “Who’s this moaning old man!”[laughs], so I decided to record her songs in my voice – then they might listen to them.

Who’s your hero?

Joni Mitchell is totally my hero. As a producer, songwriter and character.

Favourite mainstream movie?

I go to romantic comedies. For me to see the Sex and the City film is really important because it’s an hour and a half of not thinking about music because I’m too confused by what’s going on onscreen! It’s like a holiday for me.

Favourite childhood movies?

The NeverEnding Story, Labyrinth, The Goonies. I was a huge Jurassic Park fan; I wrote to Steven Spielberg asking him to put me in Jurassic Park 2 but I never got a reply.

Would you like to be a parent?

I’d love to be a father. I’ve got my music-teacher streak in me. I’d love to. I think William and I are kind of stable enough to bring someone up to do something in the world.

Рубрики:  Photo
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МУЗ ТВ + ПВ

Дневник

Понедельник, 23 Января 2012 г. 21:51 + в цитатник
--IAM-- (patrick_wolf_gang) все записи автора

Русское тв как всегда отличилось и наплело кучу несуразного бреда, но спасибо что хоть немного закулисья поснимали :)

1937239_vlcsnap174405 (640x480, 257Kb)

http://muz-tv.ru/video/836/841/8136/

Рубрики:  Video
Interviews

How Love Tamed Patrick Wolf

Дневник

Четверг, 21 Апреля 2011 г. 10:07 + в цитатник
Icedragon (patrick_wolf_gang) все записи автора Что-то у нас на сообществе какая-то полная пичалька. Чтобы разнообразить серые будни, вот вам интервью с Патриком. Ничего эксклюзивного, но вдруг кто-то ещё не видел.

Здесь можно посмотреть фотографии и почитать интервью.
А ещё можно посмотреть как Патрика причёсывают, и немножко его послушать.




Рубрики:  Video
Interviews

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+ Interviews

Дневник

Пятница, 18 Марта 2011 г. 00:17 + в цитатник
Рубрики:  Interviews

Замечательное интервью от www.gigwise.com

Дневник

Пятница, 18 Марта 2011 г. 19:46 + в цитатник
--IAM-- (patrick_wolf_gang) все записи автора

 Patrick Wolf has long been held up as an example of the best that British alternative music has to offer. His fifth studio outing, Lupercalia, is out at the end of the month and looks set to be one of the records of the year. 


Lady Gaga already counts herself a fan and, with a new, more accessible sound, indebted to motown and disco but entirely his own, Wolf maybe about to make the major leap into the popular conscience he’s been threatening since 2006’s acclaimed ‘The Magic Position.’ Recently, Gigwise caught up with Patrick to discuss love, loss and experimentation.


Your new album, ‘Lupercalia’, was originally going to be the called ‘The Conqueror’, forming one half of a double album alongside 2009’s ‘The Bachelor’. What informed your decision to scrap that plan and make an entirely separate record?

Patrick: There were a lot of reasons for that. I think that by the end of touring ‘The Bachelor’ I felt I’d already explored a lot of what was going to be on ‘The Conqueror’ in a live setting. When I came to thinking about what to do next I had 5 or 7 quite claustrophobic, quite aggressive songs my on hands. I felt to use those would’ve been to make a sequel rather than a counterpart, so I decided it was time to move on. I always like to do something new. I can let go those tracks go in other ways. Maybe they’ll be b-sides or an E.P. I still haven’t figured out what the bonus material to go with this album will be.

What I really wanted was to express something positive. The idea for ‘The Conqueror’ was that love conquerors all. I was worried people wouldn’t read into that. I’m already known as somebody quite bombastic, I didn’t want people to think the title was referring to me. 

You’ve talked about splitting up those albums and their separate ideas, but you’re also known for bringing contrary things together, for instance, in any given one of yours songs your as likely to use a lute as a 16bit Atari loop…

Patrick: For me it’s about extremes, different ends of the spectrum. I was listening to the album last night, trying to bond with it again after all the mastering and scientific processes that go into finishing off a record. I realised what I wanted to get across was a range of feelings. Even though there’s a lot of happiness, there’s melancholy mixed in with it. Those are the extremes I’m using, on this album at least. 

Even amongst the most upbeat songs there’s a variance between those which deal with the joy of being in love and those that deal with the joy you can derive from being out of love, the single ‘Time of My Life’, for instance, the key line being “ [I’m] happy without you.”


Patrick: Yeah, ‘Time of My Life’, ‘The Days’ ‘and Slow Motion’ are all like that. The song ‘William’ is melancholy and ‘Together’ has a certain sadness to it as well. It’s not some anodyne, optimistic record. You can’t have light without darkness. It’s like what you mentioned about using different sounds. I always want to throw something futuristic into the melting pot, in the production especially. Even with the fairly traditional sounds like recording the orchestra, for example. We didn’t do it conventionally. We didn’t use room mikes or try and capture the ambience of an ensemble, we recorded each instrument separately and then split it all up. You can experiment even when you’re dealing with timeless themes.

Returning to this theme of splits and opposites again, I notice that while your previous albums have often dealt with the fantastical, taking inspiration from fairytales and other magical influences, the landscape of this record is much more domestic. You sing about “crossing the threshold” and protecting “the roof over your head”…


Patrick: Wow, you’ve really been listening! That’s nice because it’s not always the case. Your right, it’s about having roots. It’s in a lot of the lyrics, “the native has returned”, for instance. I was thinking of “The return of the Native” by Thomas Hardy which is one of my favourite books. It’s about the feeling of being connected to a place. 

I was actually really close to calling the album ‘The Native’. I was born in St Thomas’s Hospital and, for three or four years now, I’ve lived very close to my birthplace. It’s helped me work out my place in the world. Ever since ‘Lycanthropy’ I’ve been asking “where is home?” On ‘Wind In the Wires’ it’s like I’m totally homeless and on ‘The Magic Position’ I was lost in a sort of daze of….

Magic?

Patrick: Yeah! ‘The Bachelor’ is the depression after the party. But this record is about having solid, firm roots. 

You mentioned a narrative running through the albums. I know that, obviously, in recording any album there’s a big time lag between writing and release. For example the song ‘Get Lost’ was five years old when it came out. Is the Patrick Wolf of ‘Lupercalia’ still the Patrick Wolf sat here now?

Patrick: Yes it is. With a lot of my albums I’ve tried to runaway from things. As you’ve mentioned there’s been a fantastical element, which was really escapism on my part. With this album I’m trying to stabilise things, I’m happy, in love and don’t want things to change. I don’t leave this album on an escapist note.

This record certainly seems more personal. In the past you’ve worked from different character perspectives. A fan favourite from your early work, “Tristan”, see’s you singing in the role of Tristam of Lyonesse. There’s none of that on the new album…

Patrick: But even ‘Tristan’ is about me, it’s just told through third person. On this album I didn’t want to speak through third person perspectives. This certain love that’s come into my life made me want to take all my masks off, drop the metaphors and feel comfortable in my own skin.

Ahh, talking of skin, the album’s title, ‘Lupercalia’, is taken from a pre-Roman fertility festival that, appropriately enough, took place on Wolf Mountain in Arcadia. It involved running around naked, purging yourself and your lovers with goat hide whips. Is there an element of purging past experiences as well as celebrating new love in that choice of title?

Patrick: To be honest I was more looking for a word associated with love that wasn’t just a cliché, that wasn’t tainted with other modern associations. I also wanted a word that was about paradise and that reflected the bravery involved in love. The album and the festival are both about bringing love and fertility into a city. It’s appropriate because this is a celebratory album, and as you pointed out it’s got a lot of urban and domestic settings.

Indeed, ‘The City’ is the lead single…

Patrick: Yeah, it was an easy choice. It just seemed to some up those ideas we’ve been talking about.

This is your most accessible album and, as we’ve discussed the themes are, whilst very personal, also fairly universal. Do you expect to reach a larger audience with this record?

Patrick: Well, I thought I was doing something really accessible with ‘The Magic Position’ but looking back I suppose it was pretty experimental. I never have any perspective on things like that. I think this is easier to digest, and the subject matter speaks to more people. It’s a mystery to me what happens after its done, in terms of whose hands and whose ears it ends up in. I can’t predict the future but I’m in a really great place right now. I feel I know how to communicate myself a lot better these days.

You learnt to play the viola at a young age and have spent time playing in orchestras and alongside groups such as Arcade Fire amongst others. Being a solo artist do you find it helps to work with others occasionally?

Patrick: It was very useful last year when I started playing for Patti Smith. It helps you focus on the music rather than the more performative aspects of things. It’s like when I used to play in orchestras, you kind of dissolve in to the totality of the sound. It helps spark my imagination for all the stuff that goes on beyond the singing. I worked with Fiona Bryce on this record for the orchestral arrangements on the album.  I was being very ambitious in what I wanted and I would have had to go back in time ten years to when I was studying music at Trinity to be able to do it on my own. I found a good collaborator there. 

You’ve done a lot of collaborations in the past and it was rumoured this album would feature Groove Armada and the actress Tilda Swinton amongst others, which it doesn’t. What happened there?

Patrick: What was amazing about signing to Mercury was that they were really uninterested in my collaborations. They preferred me to be autonomous, to stick to my own vision. 

The earlier records were me alone with my music. ‘The Bachelor’ was me starting to get bored of myself. ‘The Conqueror’ was going to have collaborations with dance producers and all the rest of it, but I couldn’t really here myself in it. The label were great in pointing out that it just wasn’t me, that I had a whole body of my own work that I should’ve had more confidence in. It was like they reigned me in, I went into my hermits cave and this album came out. That’s why there are no collaborations on it, no duets even.

The last album was released through fans buying shares in it. It sounds like your glad to be back on a label…


Patrick: It’s really good to have a sounding board and a team of people you can trust.

In the past you’ve spoken out against the dominance of guitars over other instruments in popular music, is that still something that annoys you? It seems today that we may be on the way towards synth hegemony instead…

Patrick: Well I got over the guitar thing because of people like Joni Mitchell, The Pixies and The Breeders. There are lots of variants of guitar, after all. Slide-guitar, for example, is gorgeous. There’s no instrument I want to banish, it’s just certain genres of music don’t make the effort the get the most out of their instruments. 

Although, for young bands with little support, it’s hard to turn up at a venue with anything that deviates too far from a standard indie-rock line up because they just don’t know how to sound check you…

Patrick: You’re totally right, it’s very true. I realised that early on. I knew almost straight away that I was always going to need my own sound engineer. You can’t just walk into a small venue and expect the sound guy there to know how to mike up a dulcimer or get the best sound out of an organ you’ve found at a car-boot sale. You need your own sound people…and a good lawyer.

You often get billed as an experimental artist. The writer B.S. Johnson hated the term ‘experimental’ because it implies something that isn’t finished or has failed. Do you mind the label?


Patrick: Not really. I think I’ll always be experimenting. Take a song like ‘Armistice’ for example. Now, people probably won’t think twice about it but it’s made up of crystal bashe, Odnes Martenot, Armenian flute, a choir and glass harmonica. 

On the production side of things, this is a heavily experimental album. With an experiment you want to reach a conclusion or a formula, these days I’m less keen to let people see the experiments until my formula is finished. I have in the past…it leads to a lot of B-sides.

 

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Patrick in HD

Дневник

Четверг, 17 Марта 2011 г. 18:55 + в цитатник
Icedragon (patrick_wolf_gang) все записи автора Вот это я называю интервью. Замечательное! И в HD. =) Те, кто не попал в первые ряды на концерте, могут рассмотреть Патрика в деталях. =)


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kinda interview

Дневник

Четверг, 17 Марта 2011 г. 18:45 + в цитатник
Icedragon (patrick_wolf_gang) все записи автора Какое-то короткое безобразие с Патриком, который слишком велик для такого маленького кресла.
Кто придумал нарисовать ему зеленеющий синяк?



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Диалог из ЕКБ

Дневник

Среда, 16 Марта 2011 г. 20:30 + в цитатник
--IAM-- (patrick_wolf_gang) все записи автора

выкладываю занятный дилог, который узнал от toorbo4ka

Девушка спрашивает:
- А почем к нам не доехали твои футболки?
- Их все продали в Москве. Но я обещаю, что когда мы вернёмся в этом году, всё будет.
Девушка, видимо не успев вовремя, задала вопрос уже после того, как Патрик закончил говорить:
- Why? (На мой взгляд вопрос относился к почему всё продали в Москве)
Патрик засмеялся и так наиграно:
- Что значит почему!? Я здесь босс! Я сказал, что мы вернёмся в этом году - значит мы вернёмся!

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Patrick Wolf: 'It was time to grow up'

Дневник

Среда, 16 Марта 2011 г. 20:24 + в цитатник
--IAM-- (patrick_wolf_gang) все записи автора В колонках играет - the city

 Newly engaged pop iconoclast Patrick Wolf tells Elizabeth Day how falling in love at first sight inspired his joyous new album.

Patrick Wolf: ‘I wanted nothing to feel artificial on this album.' Photograph: Ryan McGinley

Patrick Wolf is sitting in a London private members' club, sipping genteelly on a Bloody Mary that is the same colour as his flamboyantly dyed auburn hair. Dressed entirely in shades of navy, Wolf has an elegant manner, and folds his angular 6ft 4in frame neatly into a velveteen-upholstered armchair like a long-legged flamingo. "The thing is," he says, eyes blinking as though startled by the sound of his own voice, "I really don't feel I belong in pop music."

Buy it from amazon.co.uk

  1. Buy the CD
  2. Patrick Wolf
  3. Lupercalia
  4. Mercury
  5. 2011

And yet Wolf is set to make quite an impact on the genre. At the age of 27, he is about to release his fifth album, Lupercalia, a work packed full of sweeping orchestration, surges of positive sentiment and oodles of commercial potential. Critics have described it as "immaculate" and "a triumph of romanticism", which isn't bad for an album that features ukulele and has such an unapologetically erudite name (for those of you without a Classics degree, Lupercalia was the forerunner to Valentine's Day: an ancient pastoral festival intended to avert evil spirits and release fertility). Admittedly, it's not the kind of thing you generally associate with the Pussycat Dolls.

Lupercalia is, says Wolf, "hugely confessional" and documents his experience of falling deeply in love with the man he is about to marry. "It was a long process," he says. "Not just the first week or the first year of love, but it's quite a few years before that… feeling the absence of love and then its discovery."

Three years ago, after relationships with both men and women, he met William Charles Pollock, who works at BBC 6 Music, by chance, at a Christmas party. It was "love at first sight". Wolf was at a low ebb, after touring relentlessly and experiencing bouts of depression that led him to contemplate quitting the music industry altogether. His songs at the time reflected his state of mind – melancholic and aggressive, with tortured, complex lyrics – and his performance persona became increasingly outrageous as he took to the stage dripping in feathers and spray-painted silver.

But now that Wolf is engaged to be married, he seems to have rediscovered a sense of simple optimism. His next single, "The City", has already been hailed by the website Digital Spy as "four of the most joyous minutes you'll have this year with your clothes on". The accompanying video features a group of shiny, happy people paddling in the surf in Santa Monica.

"I wanted nothing to feel artificial on this album at all," says Wolf. "I wanted to document my joy as naturally as possible… It was time to grow up and change." Later he adds, almost as an afterthought: "I can't lie about things. I find it very hard." And it is true that Wolf seems to embody an unfettered innocence. He is at pains to express himself clearly in answer to questions, taking time to ensure that he has got his point across as honestly as possible and admitting: "I'd rather be embarrassingly open than embarrassingly guarded."

Both his openness and his creativity stem from a "wonderful childhood", raised by an artist mother and a musician father in Clapham, south London, with regular holidays to visit his maternal grandparents in County Cork, who introduced him to WB Yeats and the Irish fiddle. "My childhood was full of fantasy," says Wolf, stirring his Bloody Mary with its celery stick. "Dad would only talk in fables or metaphor. It would be: 'Let's go find a pot of gold when there's a rainbow', not: 'Let's go kick a football.' It's in my blood to tell stories."

When he was sent to a private, all-boys' secondary school in Wimbledon, he found it difficult to settle in and was badly bullied. "I was suddenly in a male, academic environment, in a place that preached competitiveness through sport and army training, and I was painting my toenails so that when I turned up, they'd send me home… I just wanted to be alone with my four-track. Solitude is one of my favourite things."

Wolf spent his spare time making music and editing his fanzine. When, aged 14, he interviewed Minty, Leigh Bowery's art-rock group, he managed to persuade them to allow him to start playing the theremin on stage as part of the band. Wolf promptly dropped his real surname – Apps – in favour of something altogether more fabulous ("I wanted it to sound courageous," he explains) and was soon reinventing himself as a performer.

When he was 15, Wolf's parents transferred him to Bedales, the progressive boarding school, and the bullying stopped; but he admits it has taken him several years, and psychotherapy, to deal with its impact. Negative criticism, he says, has lost its power to wound – "I'm not comfortable with it but I'm numbed to it" – and now he is keen to move on. "I find it quite strange thinking about myself as a teenager," he says. "It feels like a world away."

Given all that Wolf has packed into the intervening years, that is not surprising. After leaving school, he busked and studied composition for 12 months at Trinity College of Music, before releasing his first album,Lycanthropy, to critical success at the age of 20, citing influences as diverse as Karlheinz Stockhausen, Hector Berlioz and Chet Baker. Two more albums followed, featuring collaborations with, among others, Marianne Faithfull and Tilda Swinton. In between recording albums, he modelled for Burberry and attended Elton John's White Tie and Tiara ball. Then, after being dropped by his record label, Wolf funded his fourth album, The Bachelor, by selling shares to his fans through the Bandstock website, generating £100,000 and making it into the top 50.

Such fan loyalty is all the more impressive given that Wolf is an artist who defies easy categorisation, both in his music (which splices folk, classical and electro-pop) and in his transgressive attitude to socially prescribed gender roles. "I really believe that love and respect in any relationship can exist outside the terms 'gay', 'straight' or 'bisexual'," he explains. "There's a kind of reverse sexism these days, where the biggest male pop stars are very booted-and-suited blokes. A man has to be seen as being in control, paying for everything: it's aspirational to have a lot of money and get all the girls."

In a world of pre-fabricated popstrels and identikit boy bands, Wolf is a much-needed iconoclast. "That's something I'm really proud of," he says. "I've never made anything that fits easily into one stream or another."

And for that, perhaps, we should all be grateful.

Lupercalia is out 30 May on Hideout

http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/2011/mar/13/patrick-wolf-lupercalia-elizabeth-day

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Комментарии (4)

A1 interview with Patrick

Дневник

Вторник, 15 Марта 2011 г. 17:05 + в цитатник
Люция_просто_Люция (patrick_wolf_gang) все записи автора

Девочку-интервьюера, кажется, никто не научил говорить в микрофон, так что вопросы вы услышите вряд ли.
Зато можно иметь удовольствие лицезреть много разных эмоций Патрика.
Ну и в конце вкусняшка - немножно про его свадьбу!)
Enjoy!


Patrik Wolf interview from The_Katerinas on Vimeo.

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What did Patrick Wolf lose to Moscow?

Дневник

Вторник, 15 Марта 2011 г. 12:28 + в цитатник
Рубрики:  Live shows
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Ничего не слышал о том, как живется геям в России, но я всегда открыт новым горизонтам!

Дневник

Вторник, 08 Марта 2011 г. 22:22 + в цитатник
Icedragon (patrick_wolf_gang) все записи автора Интервью с Патриком на сайте "Афиши".
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BBC Radio 6 3.4.2011

Дневник

Суббота, 05 Марта 2011 г. 17:30 + в цитатник
--IAM-- (patrick_wolf_gang) все записи автора

 Patrick Wolf - BBC Radio 6 4.3.2011

1. The City
2. Time Of My Life
3. Sing

+ interview

Sendspace, 40.57MB:

http://hearthatbomb.blogspot.com/2011/03/patrick-wolf-bbc-radio-6-432011.html

я вчера так и не дождался - уснул в два ночи. так что спасибо англичанам, или кто там рипал)

Рубрики:  Downloads
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Patrick in NME's 60 most anticipated albums of 2011

Дневник

Четверг, 13 Января 2011 г. 18:05 + в цитатник
--IAM-- (patrick_wolf_gang) все записи автора В колонках играет - bluebells

 На шестом месте. Прямо рядом с Гагой :D

 

 

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Патрик о новом альбоме

Дневник

Среда, 05 Января 2011 г. 19:10 + в цитатник
Рубрики:  News
Interviews

С наступившим новым годом!

Дневник

Суббота, 01 Января 2011 г. 15:47 + в цитатник
RavenTores (patrick_wolf_gang) все записи автора

Этот новый год начался  замечательным известием)

Патрик, в своем твиттере _PATRICK_WOLF  сообщил о том, что Вильям сделал ему предложение)

Для Патрика этот новый год начался очень счастливо и романтично)

Patrick Wolf  "this is the happiest new years day and day of my life. william charles pollock has asked for my hand in marriage. finally. finally. my man x"
 

Пусть и у вас всех  будет немало радости и счастья в этом новом году)

Рубрики:  Interviews

Комментарии (2)

Videos

Дневник

Воскресенье, 06 Декабря 2009 г. 15:41 + в цитатник
homicidal_pudding (patrick_wolf_gang) все записи автора Ввиду того, что в сообществе уже сто лет ничего не постилось, спешу порадовать тех, кто еще не плюнул нас читать, парочкой не слишком актуальных, но симпатичных видео.

Кликнув на прекрасное фото сверху, можно посмотреть крошечное видео с летнего Melt Festival в Германии, в котором Патрик очень сосредоточненно рисует на футболочке нечто похожее на страшненькую женщину или мерилиноменсоноподобного мужчину.


По этой ^ ссылке можно посмотреть интервью после октябрьского концерта в Праге, которое брала девушка, до боли похожая на Елену Воробей О_о, узнать о разнообразных голосах патриковой голове, и заодно послушать приятное исполнение Pigeon Song, а также,в качестве фона, Damaris и Bluebells. Дабы сохранить ваше время и нервы скажу сразу - Патрик начинается на 24й минуте видео =)

Всем приятного просмотра.
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Patrick Wolf: A Quietus Session And Interview

Дневник

Вторник, 17 Ноября 2009 г. 15:23 + в цитатник
--IAM-- (patrick_wolf_gang) все записи автора

Patrick Wolf: A Quietus Session And Interview

01 The Sun is Often Out
02 Interview
03 All I Want (Joni Mitchell cover)

code:
http://ifolder.ru/15018413

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