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Wednesday, June 24, 2020
Nuala Honan jumps off the cliff and soars on "Day to Day" from her "Doubt & Reckoning" album
Photo by Paul Blakemore
Day to Day from Nuala Honan's evocative sophomore full length "Doubt & Reckoning" is a beautiful sonic capolavoro with a cinematic sweep. Honan's songwriting has stretched out, jumped off a cliff and soared on this one. She almost imperceptibly floats in deep resonant chamber pop ascensions held together with phrases of folk and light jazz, as well as baroque pop. I even felt, heard a surf punk guitar line here and the ending musical break is phenomenal. Much respect lovely lady, much respect.
-Robb Donker Curtius
THE FACTS AS WE KNOW THEM - PRESS NOTES:
Scaling new heights of noise and pop production following her former incarnation as a much-loved acoustic folk artist, 2020 sets off a new chapter for Nuala Honan. On her new music, mellifluous voice and harmonies play off finely crafted lyrics and strung-out guitars. It’s a sound that transmits the raw energy and dynamism of her band, a crack-team of creative musicians from the alternative scene who complement Honan’s acute talent as a live performer – a talent that she has nurtured over more than a decade spent building a following for her exceptional vocals and magnetic connection with audiences.
Nuala Honan is set to launch her second album in 2020 - following a spell of personal recuperation and creative evolution for the Bristol-based, Australia-born independent artist.
Recorded at Geoff Barrow’s (Portishead) Invada studio, the record was realised in collaboration with a live band featuring Luke Cawthra (The Brackish) Matthew Jones (Zun Zun Egui), Ben Winter and Stevie Jo Dooley (Toddler), and co-produced by Honan and Aidan Sheehan (Low’s Museum).
The power of compassion and connection with the world around us, the struggle of choosing vulnerability over fear - and of embracing community - are themes that run through her new work.
Originally from rural outback Australia, Nuala Honan was awarded the South Australian Music Industry Award for Most Outstanding Female Vocalist before moving to England (aged just 19) to be closer to her family's Irish musical heritage and an adventurous music scene. Settling in Bristol, she became a fixture in the city’s music community as both a performer and promoter, as well as programming stages at festivals including Larmer Tree, and co-founding an initiative to advocate for and represent women in the music industry. In short, a DIY dynamo.
After self-releasing her 2013 debut album ‘The Tortoise’ (to heavy support including the likes of BBC Introducing, Fresh On The Net and Spindle Magazine); followed by a busy spell of touring and playing on some of the UK and Ireland’s biggest festival stages including Glastonbury, Green Man, Shambala, Bestival and Electric Picnic; Honan recently took some much-needed distance and time out from the mental and physical realities of life as an independent troubadour.
She started working as a lifeguard at a swimming lake in north Bristol – an old flooded quarry with Victorian-esque diving boards and lawn. She found perspective, and calm, on surrounding herself with and surrendering herself to the therapeutic benefits and the here-and-now of outdoor swimming in all weathers. She stripped her creative world down to the basics and built it back up in a sustainable, joyful, communal way. And she now returns from her sabbatical with a reawakened sense of purpose and a fire in her belly.
“When I stopped I realised I wasn’t making the music I listen to, and want to hear – the sounds that inspired me to make music in my youth. This new music feels like stepping into the most authentic version of myself, which is terrifying. But artists like St Vincent, Angel Olsen and tUnE-yArDs empowered me to have confidence in my ideas and be radical with my songwriting and production.”
On her new material Nuala harvests all her experience to date, and her gift for timeless songwriting, into a sound that lies somewhere between her rural desert upbringing and her fearless pop contemporaries.
Driven by post-punk rawness, yet still letting fly with moments of audacious, operatic singing over the tumultuous drums, Honan wields her Telecaster and leads a killer band in a pop-drama, exploring the strength in vulnerability and connection.
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