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Rolling Stone premieres “Iron Moon” and details for Chelsea Wolfe’s upcoming album Abyss

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It’s been a whirlwind two years for Chelsea Wolfe. Since the 2013 release of her breakthrough third album, Pain Is Beauty, the singer-songwriter has toured with Queens of the Stone Age, released a surreal 50-minute film, Lone, and had a song, “Feral Love,” featured in trailers for the hit HBO series Game of Thrones. More recently, she completed her highly anticipated fourth full-length, and her darkest, heaviest and most personal album yet, Abyss.

Last Wednesday, Wolfe released a teaser trailer for the new record, which will be out August 7th on Sargent House, along with a clip of a new song, “Iron Moon”; today, she has unveiled the full track, a haunting, doomy exercise in loud-quiet-loud dynamics that can be streamed HERE.

‘Iron Moon’ was the last song written for the album,“ Wolfe says. "The music is co-written by our friend Karlos Ayala who wrote the song ‘Boyfriend’ we covered a few years back. Lyrically, this song was inspired after reading the poetry of a Foxconn worker who took his own life – his frustration and desperation. There’s a blurry confusion throughout the lyrics on the album, as it sometimes is in dreams, like you’re new to the afterlife and things are slightly different, more hazy and fluid. I imagine the quiet parts of the song sung from a small, dorm-style room, and the loud parts as a scene out of a musical, where the worker sings and dances through the factory lines with total freedom and abandon. Such a great crew of musicians came together to bring these feelings and sounds to life.”

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The musicians who played on Abyss include Wolfe’s longtime collaborators multi-instrumentalist and co-writer Ben Chisholm and drummer Dylan Fujioka, as well as Ezra Buchla on viola and Russian Circles’ Mike Sullivan on guitar. The ensemble recorded the album in Dallas, Texas, with producer John Congleton (St. Vincent, Swans); together, they all strived to create a record instilled with what Wolfe describes as “the feeling of when you’re dreaming, and you briefly wake up, but then fall back asleep into the same dream, diving quickly into your own subconscious.”

Abyss is available for pre-order via iTunes and in physical editions via Sargent House both in the U.S. and worldwide and in Europe and the U.K.

Abyss track list:

1. “Carrion Flowers”
2. “Iron Moon”
3. “Dragged Out”
4. “Maw”
5. “Grey Days”
6. “After the Fall”
7. “Crazy Love”
8. “Simple Death”
9. “Survive”
10. “Color of Blood”
11. “The Abyss”

(via Rolling Stone)

Chelsea Wolfe: ABYSS (Album Trailer)

The first sights and sounds released from the upcoming Chelsea Wolfe album “Abyss,” out this Summer, 2015 on Sargent House.

The video above was filmed in and around Dallas, TX and at Elmwood Recording studio. Featuring Chelsea Wolfe, Ben Chisholm, Dylan Fujioka, Ezra Buchla, and special guests Mike Sullivan (Russian Circles)  D.H. Phillips (True Widow) and producer John Congleton.

And here is a vimeo version for the countries unable to get youtube.

Chelsea Wolfe: ABYSS (Album Trailer) from Sargent House on Vimeo.

Singer Chelsea Wolfe opens up about her tour and her new film collaboration, Lone, with director…

Singer Chelsea Wolfe opens up about her tour and her new film collaboration, Lone, with director Mark Pellington.

Los Angeles songstress Chelsea Wolfe may be best known for her haunting vocals and dark, atmospheric sound, but it’s a penchant for diversity that keeps her fans intrigued. Just back from a European tour for her fourth studio album Pain is Beauty, the artist is riding high on the success of her recent film collaboration with director Mark Pellington, entitled Lone (2014).

Wolfe’s latest video, for her single “Feral Love”—which was featured in the Season 4 trailer for Game of Thrones—is actually an excerpt from Lone. She and Pellington, perhaps best known for his work with bands like U2, Nine Inch Nails, and directing Pearl Jam’s “Jeremy,” pulled all the visuals from the film.

“You’ll see all those images that flash throughout ‘Feral Love’ expanded upon in the film,” said Wolfe. “Originally we were just going to do a music video, and the project expanded from there.”

Below, Wolfe tells us why she loves touring, what inspires her, and why she idealizes Depression era art and music.

How was the tour? Any highlights?
CHELSEA WOLFE: It was really good, a lot of intense shows, great audiences. My favorite show was Off Festival in Poland. We were supposed to play last year, and I had to cancel at the last minute. I don’t like canceling, so I was really grateful that they let me make it up to them this year, and it was so worth it. We played to 8,000 people on what they called the “Forest Stage,” surrounded by trees. It was really special to feel so welcomed in a setting like that.

That sounds amazing. Do you miss touring?
CW: I love touring. It’s so refreshing to meet so many new people and see new places. But I was glad to get home from this one because I’d been working on my new album. I had all these ideas, and I was so eager to get back and work on it. Right now, I’ve just been holed up writing at home. It’s been great to be a hermit again for a while, which is my natural inclination anyway.

You’ve said the state of the world was your main inspiration and content source for songwriting. Is this still true?
CW: I’m still inspired by the way the world is, yes. If you really stop and think about it for a second, things are pretty bad. In certain parts of America, we have it easy, so it’s easy to forget. We are all escapists, looking for ways to deal and get on with our own lives. There’s nothing wrong with that, but sometimes I try to force myself to remember. That’s usually what songwriting is for me, a way for me to put things in place. If a song can help someone else cope with a difficult situation, even just by listening to it, crying and letting it out, that’s great. Crying can be healing. I think it’s a good thing sometimes.

Agreed. Can you talk about Lone?
CW: The film is about not being able to tell if your memories are real or not, which is a constant thing for me because I have sleep and memory issues. We would meet a lot to come up with visions, ideas, and casting, but once we were on set and filming, it was obvious that Mark was in control; it was his world as the director.

Chelsea Wolfe.

Can you describe the look and feel of the film?
CW: I wanted there to be found footage of natural disasters and intense nature, and discovered that cutting found footage with original footage is something Mark is really great at—it’s part of his style. It all comes together in this frantic and surreal way.

You’ve cited the films of Ingmar Bergman as an influence on your aesthetic. What draws you to him so much?
CW: I loved The Seventh Seal when I was young, and felt drawn to the stark and beautiful way he presented the world… the mix of reality and surreality. Visually, the dark contrast and his use of lighting and shadow is something I’ve been continually inspired by over the years.

Are there any other directors or films that you draw inspiration from when writing and recording?
CW: Some favorites are Werner Herzog and Lars von Trier. Lars von Trier’s films are almost hard to watch. They are very disturbing, which is why I like him, but at the same time it took me three tries to get through Antichrist. I had to turn it off. Yet it’s so beautifully shot—the way it turns out is so amazing. Certain films will slay me. More recently, Under the Skin, directed by Jonathan Glazer messed me up.

You said in a previous interview that you were never young. There is a scene film called Daisies, where one of the characters tells one of the protagonists: “You don’t belong to this century.” Do you feel that you don’t belong to this century, or there is a time period that most reflects you?
CW: Well, I don’t think that it reflects me necessarily, more so my ideals about art. There was a long time where I was obsessed with the Depression era. When things are that dire and dark, and you’re not sure where the next meal is going to come from, music and art become so much more important because it’s something that can heal you, something that can distract you. In that way I idealize that era a little bit and think of it maybe as a more simple time for music, because it was really just all about honesty, and writing songs that hit people in the heart.

For more on Chelsea Wolfe, grab a copy of Beautiful Savage at Hennessey + Ingalls (1520 N. Cahuenga Blvd. #8, Hollywood, 323-466-1256) booksellers in Hollywood.

PHOTOGRAPHY BY MARIE NAHON (BLACK AND WHITE); NICK FANCHER (CLOSE UP)

—CHAD SAVILLE with IOULIA BOREALIS

Chad Saville is the founder and editor of Beautiful Savage magazine, an independent print glossy devoted to art, fashion, and the creative lifestyle. LA Confidential x Beautiful Savage is a creative partnership between LA’s premier luxury magazine and Beautiful SavageFor more information, visit beautifulsavage.com or @chadsaville.

WXPN Folkadelphia : Chelsea Wolfe Acoustic Session

Finally, we are pleased to present the premiere of Chelsea Wolfe‘s Folkadelphia Session, recorded 5 months ago from today – how time flies – but what an absolutely perfect one for Halloween. The genesis of our session with Wolfe can be tracked to the end of 2012 when we saw she was performing at the tiny and intimate First Unitarian Church Chapel. Jump forward in time through two albums (Unknown Rooms and last year’s Pain is Beauty), various tours, and a handful of emails back-and-forth, and we finally were able to welcome Wolfe and her band to the WXPN studio. Why the extra enthusiasm for this session? Why try so hard to record a single artist? Well, listen to Chelsea Wolfe and you’ll immediately find out why.


Chelsea Wolfe is basically a genre unto herself. Unclassifiable not only because she seemingly stands apart from easy stylistic boxes, but also because she integrates so much into her sound. On the one hand, a minimalist and achingly somber ballad where silence speaks volumes

and words are no consolation, like some tracks from Unknown Rooms, or a Lynchian industrial nightmare straight to the earhole, like some tracks from Pain is Beauty, on the other. What remains consistent is an expansive musical world that feeds on both darkness and light, that produces banshee wails of noise, as much as the brisk cold emptiness of silence. Yes, there is brutality there, but a tenderness too. It makes me think about a quote from Gabriel Garcia Marquez’s A Chronicle of a Death Foretold – “Hate and love are reciprocal passions.” All of these supposed opposites co-exist in Wolfe’s music, sometimes painfully and sometimes easily, but always with beauty. I think that Wolfe has only touched the tip of the iceberg of her immense imagination and creative powers – who knows where they’ll lead her next.

Chelsea Wolfe, along with Ben Chisholm and Andrea Calderon, performed a stripped down set of music for us, one that was well worth the wait. We think you’ll agree, so please listen to Wolfe’s Folkadelphia Session.

Flaunt Magazine Posts Chelsea Wolfe’s European Tour Diary

A year ago this month, my album Pain is Beauty was released. Since then, my bandmates and I have been touring pretty much nonstop, in different incarnations and situations. We’ve done co-headline tours with Russian Circles, minimal acoustic tours, and full band tours opening for Queens of the Stone Age. Our last stop was a headline tour of Europe, based around the summer festivals there. My dear friend and photographer Virginie Khateeb from Paris came along towards the end to hang out and take some photos. Most of them are film. She’s a calm, lovely soul and one of the few people I’ve felt comfortable enough with to let into the strange microcosm that is tour.

Click HERE TO see FULL SIZE Photo Gallery & Read Diary on FLAUNT

BRUSSELS, BELGIUM
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Here I’m getting my palm tattooed by Jean-Philipe Burton at his shop in Brussels. he’s a great dude and I’ve been a fan of his work for a while now.

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My friends An and Filip from A.F. Vandevorst came to the Brussels venue to say hello before the show. It’s always fun to hang out and talk with them, they’re very inspiring people and I adore their designs. here I’m wearing Weekday neoprene shoes, a kimono from Japan and a dress made by this great designer Gemma Kahng, via my stylist Jenni Hensler.

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Onstage with my Fender Jaguar. this show was nice, in an intimate venue called Le Brass. Belgium is one of my favorite places to visit on tour.

AMSTERDAM
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The band rarely does group photos but Virginie got us all to pose on this shitty leather couch backstage in Amsterdam. I love my bandmates. I have a few different people I play with and this time I brought Ezra Buchla (far right) to play viola, he’s amazing. Dylan Fujioka (second from left) plays drums and Ben Chisholm is my co-producer and plays bass and keys live.

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Virginie is an old friend of mine and we always make each other laugh. this is right before I went onstage in Amsterdam, wearing some of my favorites – Ovate Lorretine dress, Pagan Poetry harness, Hunter Gatherer rings, Aoi Kotsuhiroi horn cuff and white kimono cape by Jenni Hensler. I love that it catches the light onstage.

LUXEMBOURG
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Writing set lists backstage in Luxembourg. we change it around a little bit each night. the numbers are references to pedal settings. I’m too forgetful to keep it all in my head.

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Performing “Kings” and “Sick” in Luxembourg. it was our first time there. the folks who ran the venue kept feeding us absinthe shots.

LONDON
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Virginie & I stopped by designer Alexandra Groover’s London studio so I could try on some things to wear to the show that night. my friend Stephen O’Malley from Sunn O))) had told me about Alexandra a while back since I was obsessing over the detail of the hooded capes she had made for them. I loved this hat, based on vintage swim caps. it reminded me of The Seventh Seal.

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This is the Alexandra Groover dress and wild necklace I ended up wearing onstage, worn w/ K/LLER quill earrings. I quit smoking a while ago but snuck some drags of Virginie’s cigarette before the show.

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Ezra playing viola at the show in London. we were supposed to play a festival called Jabberwocky there with a lot of other bands but it got cancelled at the last minute. we pulled together a last minute show with our friends Deafheaven at the Garage in London and it was a blast.

Written by Chelsea Wolfe
Photographed by Virginie Khateeb

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Chelsea Wolfe releases “Kings” Video on the anniversary of Pain Is Beauty & Special 3 Day Sale

imageOne year ago, on September 3, 2013 Chelsea Wolfe’s album Pain Is Beauty was released. To celebrate the Anniversary Sargent House is offering it digitally, in any file size you like for just $3.99 on Chelsea Wolfe’s Bandcamp starting now through September 6th. We will also be offering 15% off ALL Chelsea Wolfe Music on Vinyl or CD, including all Music Bundles and or the custom USB drive with the film “Lone” on it. Just use the discount code “KINGS” at http://chelseawolfe.hellomerch.com from now through Midnight on Sept 6th.

And here is the new video for “Kings”

Chelsea Wolfe releases “Kings” Video on the anniversary of Pain Is Beauty & Special 3 Day Sale

imageOne year ago, on September 3, 2013 Chelsea Wolfe’s album Pain Is Beauty was released. To celebrate the Anniversary Sargent House is offering it digitally, in any file size you like for just $3.99 on Chelsea Wolfe’s Bandcamp starting now through September 6th. We will also be offering 15% off ALL Chelsea Wolfe Music on Vinyl or CD, including all Music Bundles and or the custom USB drive with the film “Lone” on it. Just use the discount code “KINGS” at http://chelseawolfe.hellomerch.com from now through Midnight on Sept 6th.

And here is the new video for “Kings”