- Music
- 15 Aug 19
Another ferocious new track from Girl Band, ahead of the release of their second album.
Girl Band have today shared 'Going Norway', the second single from their new album The Talkies, out on Rough Trade Records on September 27th.
The Talkies is the follow up to the band’s critically acclaimed debut LP Holding Hands with Jamie.
Following on the heels of lead single 'Shoulderblades', 'Going Norway' debuts today with a Bob Gallagher directed music video for the track. A 7” vinyl version of the single is out tomorrow, Friday, August 16th.
The Talkies was produced by the band’s own Daniel Fox, and recorded in November 2018 at Ballintubbert House, a stately manor on the outskirts of Dublin.
Speaking about the album, band member Alan Duggan says, “In many ways, the idea behind the album was to make an audio representation of the manor home.” The space became Girl Band’s sonic playground as the members worked to adjust to the house’s corners and textures to create the soundscape of the record.
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About 'Going Norway', Dara says: “Going Norway was actually one of the first tracks we finished but the melody actually comes from a track that I wrote about 8 years ago. I saved that melody and brought it up when I didn’t have any ideas left, I was also doing a lot of mindfulness mediation around the time of it, so lyrically I decided not to use any pronouns within Going Norway and the whole album - that came about when I came across this quote from the Buddha which was ’Nothing is to be clung to as I, me or mine’ - and I removed all that in a way to kind of find an abstract world to live in.”
In 'Going Norway', we hear the mimicry of Dara’s vocal to Alan’s guitar coming close to a moan, both simultaneously reaching outside of the confines of Adam’s steady, flitting snare sound: ‘And Why/ Is the Death/ So Alive?’ The track pushes and pulls against itself, and the emotion is felt within this combative movement and the elongation of vowels – the intensive repetition to the point of abstraction results in a violent discrepancy between language and meaning, as Dara draws attention instead to the way the mouth moves and how sound is formed.
Listen to 'Going Norway' here: