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Beyond the Boys’ Club: Chelsea Wolfe // Consequence of Sound

(Interview via Consequence of Sound)

Beyond the Boys’ Club is a monthly column from journalist and radio host Anne Erickson, focusing on women in the heavy music genres, as they offer their perspectives on the music industry and discuss their personal experiences. This month’s piece features an interview with singer-songwriter Chelsea Wolfe

Chelsea Wolfe connects with a spectrum of musical dynamics, from the heavy, distorted guitars of metal music to the intimate, sparse instrumentals of folk. On her upcoming album, Birth of Violence, Wolfe embraces her folk side with acoustic songs and themes that embrace her womanhood and strength in the world. 

With Birth of Violence set to arrive on September 13th, Wolfe spoke with Heavy Consequence for the latest “Beyond the Boys’ Club” column, discussing the inspiration for Birth of Violence, the female musicians who inspired her, the rise of women in rock, and more. Read the full interview below.

ON THE TITLE OF HER NEW ALBUM, BIRTH OF VIOLENCE, AND ITS ORIGINS 

I used to work in a used book store in high school, and I spent time cruising the back rooms, coming across these big, intense looking titles, like Grapes of Wrath. That really stood out to me. So, I wanted something that when you first looked at it, it looked like the title of an old book. I didn’t want it to be misunderstood, but for me, the word “violence” is such a beautiful sounding word, and that phrase came to me in a state of mind where I was almost channeling it from something else. It helped explain the album. 

ON HOW BIRTH OF VIOLENCE RELATES TO WOMANHOOD 

I was thinking of the word in a more poetic way and claiming it as a woman. I have this old dictionary, and one definition of violence is “strength of emotion.” The world views women as these overly emotional beings, so I wanted to kind of claim it for myself. “Birth of Violence,” for me, is standing up and claiming your power, and it’s very connected to the album cover, which is a nod to Joan of Arc. It’s about standing up for something, whether it’s your art or vision as a woman. 

Before Hiss Spun, my last record, I felt like I was writing and experiencing music in a very androgynous way. When I entered into my 30s and was writing Hiss Spun, there was a shift in me, and I felt connected to being a woman more physically and started exploring that more. I put a lot of that into Hiss Spun and even more into Birth of Violence. It’s about navigating the world as a woman. As I started to write, I had a vision of this character as a Victorian woman who the world saw as a maiden but she very much wanted to be a warrior. It’s about balancing that soft and strong energy. 

ON THE CHANGE SHE’S NOTICED SINCE THE #METOO MOVEMENT TOOK SHAPE 

I’ve noticed that the presence of women changes the way some older men will act who are maybe used to thinking of women as the groupies. I definitely see a shift when we’ve done opening tours where you can feel that they are aware that they need to speak differently and in a more respectful way, and that’s cool. It’s nice that I don’t have to say something about it, which I would, if I had to. But, I’ve worked on surrounding myself with people who are respectful of all genders. I have the coolest, most respectful band and crew who I’ve never heard say anything that I would question.

ON WHICH FEMALE MUSICIANS MOST INSPIRED HER GROWING UP, AND WHEN WRITING BIRTH OF VIOLENCE 

I think for this record, especially — I grew up on Joni Mitchell and Fleetwood Mac, so there’s a lot of Stevie Nicks in here. My mom listened to a lot of Bonnie Raitt, so I had a lot of female influences early on, and I came back to that a lot on this record. But, there’s also the very rock ‘n’ roll side, like L7 and the Distillers. 

ON RECENT STATISTICS THAT SUGGEST MORE YOUNG WOMEN ARE LEARNING HOW TO PLAY GUITAR 

I definitely see a lot more young women playing guitar and starting rock bands. It bothers me when I hear someone who has been around a while say rock n’ roll is dead. Rock ‘n’ roll is not dead — you’re just looking in the wrong places. There are so many people playing really rad, new rock, especially women. 

ON HER MUSIC BEING INFLUENCED BY BOTH THE METAL AND FOLK GENRES 

I’m definitely inspired and influenced by metal, and I think I inject a lot of that into my music. On this record, it was intentionally more held back and acoustic and focused on my folk side, but throughout my entire life and career as a musician, it’s been about balancing heavy and light, soft and strong. That’s been a big theme for me. Sometimes I lean more toward playing heavy, distorted electric guitar, and sometimes I want to withdraw and play these quiet, acoustic songs that feel intimate. I guess some people in the heavy music community can relate to that, as well. 

ON BIRTH OF VIOLENCE MARKING A NEW ERA FOR HER MUSIC 

I think this record feels very much like a personal awakening and a new era. I decided last year that I really needed to take a break from the road, so I started saying no to stuff. I needed to take a good chunk of time off this year to be at home and figure out how to take better care of myself mentally and physically and spiritually. We had been on tour eight years, and we’ve had so many amazing experiences, but it doesn’t give you time or space to create your own habits and rituals. I wanted to have an extended period of time at home to settle into this house that I moved into a few years ago and hadn’t had time to settle into. This record is a reflection of being on the road, and it’s about finding a place to call home, which is where I live now, in the mountains of northern California.

ON HER DECISION TO RECORD BIRTH OF VIOLENCE AT HER NORTHERN CALIFORNIA HOME 

I didn’t want to immediately get on a plane and fly to someone else’s studio, and also it was a DIY vibe where we thought, we actually have the tools and gear and knowledge at this point where we can make a record that sounds pretty good. At the end of the day, for me, it’s about the songs and conveying the feeling of the songs, and I wanted to capture that atmosphere of where I live. It was snowing a lot of the time, so it was really quiet and insulated. Then, the sky opened up towards the spring, and there were thunderstorms. I would leave the door open behind me sometimes when I was recording vocals and capture some of the sounds around where I live. 

ON HER START AS A GUITARIST AND FINDING HER MUSICAL VOICE 

I was definitely intimated as a young person by guitar players who could really shred or were really technical, because that just wasn’t my style. So, when Fender featured me on a new guitar video series they were doing, I thought that was really cool, because I’m not a super technical player. I thought it might be cool for a younger musicians to see someone like me who is a bit self-taught to see that you can create your own style of playing guitar and that it doesn’t have to be this cookie-cutter trained thing. Training is very valid and I adore people who are super technical, but that’s just not me. 

ON THE ADVICE SHE WOULD GIVE YOUNG PEOPLE WHO ARE GETTING INTO THE MUSIC WORLD 

Know that the thing that makes you feel like a weirdo or outcast or like something is wrong with you is probably the thing that is going to set you apart when you’re older and have been doing it a while. Follow whatever weird intuition that you’re getting from playing music. Be yourself. I was super shy when I started out and would wear a Victorian mourning veil over my face and try to put some kind of barrier over myself, because I was so afraid of being onstage in front of people, but somehow, people still accepted me and were so open to hearing my music. So, as long as you are truly being you, no matter how weird it feels at the time, just follow that.

Our thanks to Chelsea Wolfe for taking the time to speak with us for this month’s “Beyond the Boys’ Club” column. Pre-order her new album, Birth of Violence, at this location, and see her upcoming tour dates here.

ALBUM OF THE WEEK: CHELSEA WOLFE’S BIRTH OF VIOLENCE // LA Weekly

(via LA Weekly)

Chelsea Wolfe  – Birth of Violence (Sargent House) 

Chelsea Wolfe performs at The Cure’s handpicked Pasadena Daydream festival this weekend, and that makes complete sense. Of course Robert Smith and company, a group that have built a career on emotional, dark and weighty indie-goth anthems love Wolfe, a singer-songwriter capable of writing dark, lush lullabies that are both devastating and thrilling. 

Birth of Violence is her sixth full length studio album since The Grime and the Glow debut in 2010 and early reports suggest that she has embraced a more folk sound this time around. If there’s any truth is that, it’s in a pagan-esque Wicker Man/Midsommar sort of way. There’s no Woody Guthrie here, but there are earthy, eerie, acoustic vibes at play.

Take the single “Be All Things,” a slow-builder that entices the listener into a crescendo of crashing waves like, very literally, a siren. The video is equally hypnotic. 

“The video is a culmination of footage taken in a few magical locations,” Wolfe said in a press release. “Around southwestern Iceland, while shooting the Birth of Violence album cover, inside Moaning Cavern in Northern California — a marble cavern 450 feet deep that I visited as a child and sang in as an adult, sending my voice out as heavy as I could against the powerful dampness and sparkles of the ancient cave walls. A special spot in nature not far from my home where the Manzanita grows up like a red and green tunnel, and a historic California hotel from the Victorian era where many from the past rested their heads.” 

So yeah, maybe this album isn’t as “heavy,” in a metal sense, as 2017’s Hiss Spun. But in many ways, not least lyrically, it feels heavier. More important, and perhaps more authentic. And we’ll be damned if “Erde” isn’t a sludgy, folk-infused monster of a song. 

Elsewhere, the opening “The Mother Road” is a gorgeous way to set the bar from the very beginning, and the title track is equally seductive. But there’s no filler here — Wolfe has composed a masterpiece. An album that should please old fans while drawing in some newbies. And these songs will go down a storm with Cure fans at the weekend.

(Sargent House)

Death Gospel Interview Feature // Metal Hammer

(Full feature via Metal Hammer)

Over the past decade, an influx of singer-songwriters has been infiltrating the metal world and reinventing the idea of what constitutes heavy music. 

Artists like Chelsea WolfeEmma Ruth Rundle, A.A. Williams and Louise Lemón, not to mention Marissa Nadler, Anna von Hausswolff and Nicole Sabouné, are all embracing darkness in a raw, visceral way, pushing boundaries of genre and style. 

Though none of them play metal, they have been embraced by metal’s fanbase, touring and collaborating with metal bands and playing festivals like Roadburn. 

No stranger to Hammer since her official debut, The Grime And The Glow, in 2010, California-born artist Chelsea Wolfe has been at the forefront of this influx. 

She grew up surrounded by country and folk, and while elements of these find their way into her transcendental and often eerie sounds, the influence of doom and goth are equally evident. 

Her metal ties are strong: she’s supported A Perfect Circle, worked with the likes of Chino Moreno, Converge and Deafheaven, and her most recent album, 2017’s Hiss Spun, might be her heaviest yet. 

“All these amazing, talented women are just blowing up their own boundaries and the boundaries society tries to place on them, making music that transcends genre, and creating a powerful energy in which someone drawn to the intensity of metal can find something to relate to,” Chelsea says. 

“None of us necessarily love to be compared to the other,” she adds, “but it’s natural for journalists to group musicians together who might be on some kind of zeitgeist wavelength.” 

While they express great respect and admiration for one another, Chelsea, A.A., Emma and Louise also feel frustration at being constantly compared as artists, particularly comparisons made about the actual sound of their music.

“I do recognise this trend, that there are women making music that isn’t metal who are being embraced by this world,” says Emma Ruth Rundle. 

“But I don’t think in a music sense that we are similar at all. I can’t tell you how frustrating it is to be lumped in with the same few people again and again. 

“I would like my music to be more like 40 Watt Sun, or Patrick Walker’s [other band] Warning: that sort of very raw, emotional music.” 

For Emma, though, the metal world is not unfamiliar. After growing up in a musical household in Los Angeles – “My parents were really into rock music – the first music I have a memory of is Depeche Mode” – she started out playing in post-rock bands like Red Sparowes and Marriages. 

But it’s her solo work, the most recent of which is her gorgeously affecting, raw and dark fifth album On Dark Horses, released last year, that she is best known for. 

“I would say I am a metalhead,” Emma says, adding that sludge band Thou will be coming over the next day to work on their upcoming collaboration. 

Emma thinks such collaborations, plus her musical CV, are part of the reason the metal world has embraced her. 

“Maybe people who were tuned into heavy music continue to follow my work after those bands,” she says. 

“I think I’ve been treated very well by the world of heavy music; I feel at home in that world. I think heavy content music is able to live alongside heavy sonic music,” she adds. 

“Carrying heavy lyrical feeling and emotion can hold its place alongside bands that have heavy riffs and 20 amps.”

Chelsea Wolfe (Image credit: Press/Zohn Mandel)

Track & Music Video Release for “American Darkness”

Chelsea Wolfe‘s new track “American Darkness” is out today. Watch the music video directed by Karlos Rene Ayala HERE.
‘Birth of Violence’ will be out September 13th. Pre-order / stream: smarturl.it/CWBirthofViolence 

N American tour dates & more at chelseawolfe.net 
All tour dates with Ioanna Gika

AUG 31 Pasadena, CA @ Pasadena Daydream Festival * 
OCT 18 San Diego, CA @ Observatory North Park 
OCT 19 Phoenix, AZ @ Crescent Ballroom 
OCT 21 Salt Lake City, UT @ Metro Music Hall 
OCT 22 Estes Park, CO @ Stanley Hotel 
OCT 24 Chicago, IL @ Metro 
OCT 25 Detroit, MI @ Senate Theater 
OCT 26 Toronto, ONT @ Queen Elizabeth Theatre 
OCT 27 Montreal, QC @ Le National 
OCT 29 Boston, MA @ Royale 
OCT 31 Philadelphia, PA @ Union Transfer 
NOV 01 New York, NY @ Brooklyn Steel 
NOV 03 Washington, DC @ 9:30 Club 
NOV 04 Charlotte, NC @ McGlohon Theater 
NOV 05 Atlanta, GA @ Terminal West 
NOV 06 Nashville, TN @ Mercy Lounge 
NOV 08 Dallas, TX @ Texas Theatre 
NOV 09 Austin, TX @ Levitation (SOLD OUT) 
NOV 10 Houston, TX @ White Oak Music Hall 
NOV 12 Santa Fe, NM @ Meow Wolf 
NOV 13 Tucson, AZ @ Club Congress 
NOV 15 Los Angeles, CA @ The Palace Theatre 
NOV 16 San Francisco, CA @ Regency Ballroom 
NOV 18 Portland, OR @ Wonder Ballroom 
NOV 20 Seattle, WA @ The Showbox 
NOV 21 Vancouver, BC @ Vogue Theatre 
Chelsea Wolfe only *

“The Mother Road” on ‘6 Best New Songs Right Now’ // Revolver

(via Revolver)

Chelsea Wolfe – “The Mother Road”

Chelsea Wolfe‘s first single from her forthcoming album Birth of Violence, “The Mother Road,” is a return to her more folk-driven side, and a considerable departure from the electric onslaught found in her previous 2017 record Hiss Spun. Sounding like she’s been sequestered on a mountain top with nothing but books on witchcraft and a handful of Joni Mitchell records (reflecting her actual retreat into the woods to work on new material), the singer/songwriter flexes her emotional and musical growth on this gorgeous, introspective cut.

‘Birth of Violence’ Album Announcement – Out Sep 13

We are proud to announce Chelsea Wolfe‘s 7th studio album, ‘Birth of Violence’, will be out September 13th on Sargent House. Stream the first track ‘The Mother Road’ here: https://smarturl.it/CWBirthofViolence 

US PRE-ORDER // EU PRE-ORDER 

Headlining tour dates with support from Ioanna Gikachelseawolfe.net/shows

 

American Darkness Tour 2019 Announcement

Chelsea Wolfe has announced her headlining N American acoustic tour in support for her new album ‘Birth of Violence’. American Darkness Tour will feature both new songs and stripped down classics. Click here to stream or pre-order: https://smarturl.it/CWBirthofViolence 

Support from Ioanna Gika on all dates: 
AUG 31 Pasadena, CA @ Pasadena Daydream Festival (CW Only) 
OCT 18 San Diego, CA @ Observatory North Park 
OCT 19 Phoenix, AZ @ Crescent Ballroom 
OCT 21 Salt Lake City, UT @ Metro Music Hall 
OCT 22 Estes Park, CO @ Stanley Hotel 
OCT 24 Chicago, IL @ Metro 
OCT 25 Detroit, MI @ Senate Theater 
OCT 26 Toronto, ONT @ Queen Elizabeth Theatre 
OCT 27 Montreal, QC @ Le National 
OCT 29 Boston, MA @ Royale 
OCT 31 Philadelphia, PA @ Union Transfer 
NOV 01 New York, NY @ Brooklyn Steel 
NOV 03 Washington, DC @ 9:30 Club 
NOV 04 Charlotte, NC @ McGlohon Theater 
NOV 05 Atlanta, GA @ Terminal West 
NOV 06 Nashville, TN @ Mercy Lounge 
NOV 08 Dallas, TX @ Texas Theatre 
NOV 09 Austin, TX @ Levitation 
NOV 10 Houston, TX @ White Oak Music Hall 
NOV 12 Santa Fe, NM @ Meow Wolf 
NOV 13 Tucson, AZ @ Club Congress 
NOV 15 Los Angeles, CA @ The Palace Theatre 
NOV 16 San Francisco, CA @ Regency Ballroom 
NOV 18 Portland, OR @ Wonder Ballroom 
NOV 20 Seattle, WA @ The Showbox 
NOV 21 Vancouver, BC @ Vogue Theatre 

Tickets on sale, Friday June 21st at 9am PST / 12pm EST at chelseawolfe.net/shows