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Chelsea Wolfe announces support for her headline September tour will be True Widow

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Chelsea Wolfe  and her band will be headlining a big North American tour in support of the new release Pain Is Beauty  coming out on September 3, 2013 on Sargent House.

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We are delighted to announce that True Widow will be joining them as direct support on the full tour (excluding Toronto). See all dates below.

FULL CHELSEA WOLFE SHOW DETAILS HERE

CHELSEA WOLFE
8/25 – Los Angeles, CA @ FYF Fest, LA History Park
9/01 – Tucson, AZ @ HOCO Festival at Hotel Congress


CHELSEA WOLFE & TRUE WIDOW
9/03 – Phoenix, AZ @ The Crescent Ballroom
9/04 – Albuquerque, NM @ Launchpad
9/06 – Austin, TX @ Mohawk
9/07 – Houston, TX @ Fitzgerald’s
9/08 – New Orleans, LA @ One Eyed Jacks
9/09 – Atlanta, GA @ The Earl
9/10 – Chapel Hill @ Local 506
9/11 – Washington DC @ Rock and Roll Hotel
9/13 – NYC, New York @ Bowery Ballroom
9/14 – Philadelphia, PA @ Union Transfer
9/15 – Cambridge, MA @ The Sinclair
9/17 – Toronto, ONT @ Horseshoe Tavern (NO True Widow)
9/19 – Pontiac, MI @ The Pike Room at Crofoot Ballroom
9/20 – Lexington, KY @ Boomslang Festival
9/21 – Chicago, IL – The Bottom Lounge
9/22 – Minneapolis, MN @ Cedar Cultural Center
9/24 – Denver, CO – Larimer Lounge
9/25 – Salt Lake City, UT @ Urban Lounge
9/26 – Boise, ID @ The Shredder
9/27 – Seattle, WA @ Barboza
9/28 – Portland, OR – Doug Fir Lounge
9/30 – San Francisco, CA @ Great American Music Hall

NPR First Listen: Chelsea Wolfe “The Warden”

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Chelsea Wolfe has a surreal voice that cuts through her foggy, soulful, often haunting rock and folk music. There’s a thorny vision of yearning, heartbreak and death in Wolfe’s songs that’s striking, yet always brings us back to what makes these bleak themes so appealing, even beautiful. When I heard that Wolfe would “go electronic” for the forthcoming Pain Is Beauty, it was no shock; after all, synths and noise had been part of her textures all along. But with “The Warden,” Wolfe has taken the fog to the club.
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Not to put too fine a point on it, but Goth kids like to dance, too. “Cities In Dust,”Lucretia”,”My Reflection “Fantastique” — all pitch-black clubbers that pop and lock with darkness. (Well, maybe not so much with the popping and locking.) “The Warden” finds camaraderie among those cavernous dance-floor staples, but its clipping 4/4 beat, Wolfe’s plaintive voice and what sounds like a hammered dulcimer keeping pace with stabbing synths — it’s almost like the Goth from the made peace with the rest of Ray of Light.

Of course, it wouldn’t be a Chelsea Wolfe song without some sonic perversion, as frequent collaborator Ben Chisholm clusters whistling synths in the last minute. As compared to the whole of Pain Is Beauty, “The Warden” is a remix-worthy anomaly on Wolfe’s fourth album. But beatmakers have been given notice.

Pain Is Beauty comes out Sept. 3 on Sargent House

Mark Lanegan covers Chelsea Wolfe’s song Flatlands on his new album Imitations

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Mark Lanegan has a new album coming out called Imitations, an album made up of covers he did and what an honor to have him include his cover of Chelsea Wolfe‘s ‘Flatlands‘ from her album Unknown Rooms . See more about the Mark Lanegan album here.

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Imitations Tracklist:
01. Flatlands (Chelsea Wolfe)
02. She’s Gone (Vern Godsin & Godsin Brothers)
03. Deepest Shade
04. You Only Live Twice (Nancy Sinatra)
05. Pretty Colors (Frank Sinatra)
06. Brompton Oratory (Nick Cave)
07. Solitaire
08. Mack The Knife (Bobby Darin)
09. I’m Not The Loving Kind (John Cale)
10. Lonely Street (Patsy Cline)
11. Elégie Funèbre (Gérard Manset)
12. Autumn Leaves

Chelsea Wolfe announces new album “Pain Is Beauty” to be released on Sept 3rd with new album trailer and Fall headline Tour dates

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Chelsea Wolfe announces the release of her new album Pain Is Beauty  on September 3, 2013 worldwide on Sargent House. Chelsea and her band will also embark on a full US  headlining tour to coincide with the new album. See full track listing and all dates below this new album trailer video.

Pain Is Beauty – Tracklisting
1. Feral Love
2. We Hit a Wall
3. House of Metal
4. The Warden
5. Destruction Makes the World Burn Brighter
6. Sick
7. Kings
8. Reins
9. Ancestors, the Ancients
10. They’ll Clap When You’re Gone
11. The Waves Have Come
12. Lone

CHELSEA WOLFE PAIN IS BEAUTY TOUR 2013 
8/25 – Los Angeles, CA @ FYF Fest, LA History Park
9/01 – Tucson, AZ @ HOCO Festival
9/03 – Phoenix, AZ @ The Crescent Ballroom
9/04 – Albuquerque, NM @ Launchpad
9/06 – Austin, TX @ Mohawk
9/07 – Houston, TX @ Fitzgerald’s
9/08 – New Orleans, LA @ One Eyed Jacks
9/09 – Atlanta, GA @ The Earl
9/10 – Chapel Hill @ Local 506
9/11 – Washington DC @ Rock and Roll Hotel
9/13 – NYC, New York @ Bowery Ballroom
9/14 – Philadelphia, PA @ Union Transfer
9/15 – Cambridge, MA @ The Sinclair
9/17 – Toronto, ONT @ The Legendary Horseshoe Tavern
9/19 – Pontiac, MI @ The Pike Room at Crofoot Ballroom
9/20 – Lexington, KY @ Boomslang Festival
9/21 – Chicago, IL – The Bottom Lounge
9/22 – Minneapolis, MN @ Cedar Cultural Center
9/24 – Denver, CO – Larimer Lounge
9/25 – Salt Lake City, UT @ Urban Lounge
9/26 – Boise, ID @ The Shredder
9/27 – Seattle, WA @ Barboza
9/28 – Portland, OR – Doug Fir Lounge
9/30 – San Francisco, CA @ Great American Music Hall

11/16 – Los Angeles, CA @ Royce Hall

Echoes And Dust Live Show Review: Chelsea Wolfe in Leeds

Chelsea Wolfe has already made quite an impression in her career to date. Her ability to combine old fashioned folk songwriting with elements of drone and psychedelia may not be as remarkably original as some will have you believe but the mixture is potent to say the least. With a band of four in tow, this date marks Wolfe’s first performance in Leeds and the main room of The Cockpit is fairly full to welcome her to West Yorkshire. The message, it seems, has spread.

Chelsea Wolfe initially emerges flanked by a violinist and a keyboard player, brandishing an acoustic guitar, and a voice that could halt any passer-by in their tracks. Despite the fact that the crowd are obviously expecting something louder the first few tracks are rapturously received and if anything it’s slightly disappointing when the violin and acoustic guitar departs to be replaced by two electric guitars and drums. Soon enough though the second half of the set proves equally arresting, despite the occasional moment when the aforementioned upstairs gig is audible at inappropriate moments.

Wolfe’s live band are far from showy, that much is true, but the added texture given to her songs by their involvement is what makes this an unforgettable performance. At times the reverberations of her voice and some simple finger-picking is enough to send the audience into hypnotic rapture but it is the dissonant, slightly krautrockian ending to the main set takes things to another level. Indeed, the power achieved by both sound incarnations, quiet and loud, is almost Swans-like in its graceful ferocity. Unmissable.

Interview and live review of Chelsea Wolfe – Antwerp May 6, 2013

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On May 6th, Chelsea Wolfe played a fantastic concert at the Trix in Antwerp. Before the concert, Phil Blackmarquis had the opportunity to meet Chelsea for an exclusive interview, done together with Michael Thiel, aka Weyrd Son, founder of Weyrd Son Records and a huge fan of the American singer/songwriter.
(Check the review of the concert here.)

PhB: Thank you very much for this interview. You are in the middle of your European Tour right now. How is it?
It’s been cool. It’s been different than usual because we’re doing a half acoustic, half electric set, so it’s been a little wierd sometimes to balance the energies of the two different sets. But it works out well.

PhB: Why did you decide to split the concerts in two sets?
We had the new(ish) acoustic album that had come out in October, so we incorporated a fair amount of it in the set but without doing an entire acoustic show, just to challenge the ‘old’ songs with something new… And we split the show in two sets…

PhB: In the US, I think it was only acoustic?
Yes, it was a suggestion from some of the venues that we’d do an acoustic and an electric set and it kind of worked out, so…

WS: Is your acoustic album, “Unknown Rooms” a sort of bridge for you between the ‘old’ and the ‘new’ Chelsea Wolfe, especially since you changed label?
I think so. My label had asked me if I wanted to do an acoustic album because I had so many old acoustic songs. People were asking me when I was going to release songs like ‘Flatlands’, which I had done years ago but hadn’t released yet. So, when the idea came up and I started compiling these old recordings, I decided to do some new ones as well. At the same time, I wanted to get away from the imagery of my former label, Pendu.

WS: Is there any reason why you hadn’t released these old songs before? Because, to me, they have as much strength as songs from ‘The Grime And The Glow’, for instance.
There’s no real reason. Music often happens without order or time, you know. The album that come out this fall has songs which I composed two years ago. It’s all about finding the right time and context for a song rather than writing it and putting it on a record immediately. Sometimes, it’s an older song that seems to fit or something you’ve just written that helps putting the puzzle together.

PhB: I heard that ‘Unknown Rooms’ has entered the charts in the US?
I have no idea. I don’t know.

WS: It’s something we saw on your Wikipedia page. It says that this album is your first album to enter the Billboard charts in the US. (Note: No. 25 in the folk chart and No. 35 in the Heatseekers chart)

WS: On the next album, there will be several electronic songs. Is it something to do with the ‘Wild Eyes’ project you have with Ben Chisholm?
Yes, we’ve had that project for several years but it just didn’t do right to have it separated from the Chelsea Wolfe project because it’s the same people, Ben and I. Same vibe, just a different sound and different instruments so we decide to combine both in one project.

PhB: Like the new song, ‘Kings’, for instance, which you play, would you say it is an example of a new song in the style of Wild Eyes?
Yes, it’s one of the songs that come from it.

WS: So, Wild Eyes is totally behind you now?
As a project, yes. A lot of the songs end up on the new album…

PhB: And are you going to release the cover of ‘Dark Rooms’? I really love it.
‘Dark Rooms’? You mean that civer we did a long time ago? I don’t remember why we did that. No, I don’t think we will release it.

PhB: So the next album is planned for September/October? I understand it will be more electronic, but also folk and rock?
Yes, with a wide range. It’s gonna be on Sargent House as well.

PhB: Do you already have a name for the album?
I have one, pretty positive but I’m not sure I can tell already, but we will announce it pretty quickly. So I have to make up my mind.

PhB: You also played another new song, ‘Feral Love’ yesterday?
Yes, this one has been there for a while as well but we re-recorded it for the new album.

WS: I read in an interview that you wanted to do something with a choir of singers?
It’s always been like a desire to do that. You know: I have a lot of idea’s I want to try out but I hope I have enough time to keep experimenting with things like that.

WS: Every album is quite different, that’s the great strength of your music!
PhB: You also introduced a violin on the last album, with the very talented Andrea Calderon?

Yes, she played on the acoustic album and also on the new album, so…

WS: Will she become part of the band?
I don’t think it’s permanent but probably for a number of shows and tours.. In every tour, we try to make things a little bit different so,;.. But she’s definitely a great addition to the project. I love to be able to have the vocal harmonies. It’s always hard to find someone who is good at harmonies and she is really good.

PhB: And her instrumental bridge on the violin between the two sets is really nice!
Yes: I asked if she could write something and she came up with that really fast…

PhB: Let’s talk about your sources of inspiration and your lyrics. Why this fascination for death, car accidents and all these things?
All of my songs have to do with death because I’ve never really had to deal with it. No one close to me has ever died yet. And I think that singing and writing about it is my way to try to understand it. I’m also interested in materialities of the world, natural disasters, the way that life is shaken up so quickly and unexpectedly. You think about life as a routine and one day, an earthquake or a tsunami can change it all in a second. That’s the kind of things that I find interesting to write songs…

WS: What about this song, ‘Boyfriend’: I knew it was a cover but I didn’t know that Ben (Chisholm) co-composed it.
Yes, it was composed by Karlos Rene Ayala, a friend from my hometown, which we both knew before we started playing music together. I really loved this song when I heard it and I didn’t realize that he had played on it, so we ended up redoing that song on the acoustic album.

WS: How was the tribute to Rudimentary Peni received? Because it didn’t really get lot of coverage in the press.
I think some people were confused. I called it a Tribute album because it’s not just covers, I just took the lyrics. But I haven’t heard anything negative about it, apart from people being mad about the way the songs were covered but I like it a lot!

WS: Are you still in touch with the guys from the band?
They heard the album and seemed to like it. C. Orr did the artwork for it.

PhB: What happened in Aachen? You had to change the venue a few days before the concert?
It’s because of a cover I did years ago and the guys of the venue thought that we were a fascist group. So, we were kicked out of the festival where we were supposed to play, so we ended up playing at the Musikbunker, which is ok. It was a nice show; I liked the place. It’s too bad that people associate us with things like that. I don’t want to be insensitive; I’m not from Germany so I understand that feeling, with history, you know… But I don’t want to be associated with fascism…

PhB: Thank you very much, Chelsea!

www.chelseawolfe.net