Posts Tagged ‘Girl Ray’

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Girl Ray’s new single,“Friend Like That” – a feelgood anthem about the love found in friendship and the latest single released from the North London band’s second album, Girl, out now via Moshi Moshi Records. 

The video, which sees the band in full 1980’s prom attire, was directed by long-time collaborator Alex Cantouris who said the following: “This is the 6th video I’ve made with Girl Ray and their attitude towards this particular one was to opt for the most “cringe option”, which I loved. Everyone’s hard work and the band’s brilliant attitude has produced a really fun video that hopefully all the fans will enjoy.”

The band added: “For this video we felt it was necessary to return to our past formula of recreating big-budget films with 0.1% of the money and 3 people whose experience of acting stops at narrating the year 1 nativity. We have always loved all the classic 80s high school rom-coms, and this particular song seemed to lend itself well to a John Hughes plot. With an extremely questionable storyline we approached Alex Cantouris to help fill in the gaps. After an incredibly stressful week of pulling favours everything was finally ready and we began filming. We actually filmed the prom scene in our old school in Muswell Hill which was a surreal and hilarious experience. It was definitely the funnest video we’ve ever shot, and is now our favourite too.”

from the North London band’s second album, “Girl”, out now via Moshi Moshi Records. 

High quality, timeless pop songs weren’t always created in offices by handfuls of writers and marketing teams and then farmed out to the highest bidding singers. Once upon a time they were written and recorded by artists – George Michael, Prince or Kate Bush for example – who wanted to use the universal, happy medium of pop music to put across joyous, accessible messages of love, friendship and life to the world.

And that’s what Girl Ray have done. They’ve done far more than just “go pop.” To have the confidence to totally change one’s creative output is something so few artists manage, but they’ve nailed it.
Back in 2017, the band Girl Ray released Earl Grey: a debut album of expertly-crafted, sweet, hummable songs about longing, friendship, self doubt and contemplation. It was a success. “With Girl Ray, we knew we had found something special,” says Stephen Bass who signed the band in 2016.

After their tour rolled to a stop and Girl Ray’s members Poppy, Sophie and Iris floated back to earth, taking up employment in shops and restaurants. They hung about listlessly, struggled with bouts of feeling a bit shit and saw each together ritualistically despite not creating much music. Poppy started writing some new songs for their second record much like the sweet odes to longing, love and friendship on their debut. But the vibes just weren’t there.
It was Ariana Grande’s explosion into pop culture that kickstarted a new era for Girl Ray. “Thank U, Next came out and that kind of changed everything,” Poppy says. That, combined with Ari’s ballad of self-love and the party vibe they witnessed when touring with US band Porches (“their live game was so fun and super synthy and so danceable,” Sophie recalls. “It looked like much more of a party,”) led to the band beginning to wonder if they could try their hand at making their own pop.

After that realisation, everything clicked into place. Poppy began experimenting with writing songs over beats. “I had to start learning how to write on a computer, using keyboards, and that made everything sound more pop,” she explains.

The songs poured out. A collection of shimmering, foot-tapping, sparkling pop bangers. It’s unmistakably Girl Ray, but with added synths. If Earl Grey was a hot cup of tea and a cuddle on the sofa, Girl is being in a cab with the windows down on the way to a beach bar for sundowners. It’s the sun kissed excitement of Rihanna’s If It’s Lovin’ That You Want, combined
with the eye-rolling, impenetrable sardonic humour of a girl gang. Among the grin-inducing, trepidatious and intensely courageous R&B-style tracks on the album are beautifully composed piano ballads steeped in the sadness and unrequited love that made Earl Grey feel like a knowing look from an old friend.

The band took the demos to Ash Workman at Electric Beach Studios in Margate. “He has more of a pop background [Christine and the Queens and Metronomy] which is exactly why we wanted him for the job,” Poppy says. “We didn’t have to compromise with him, he just got it straight away.” Ash listened to the demos and was keen to help them produce a record that sounded something like “70s Drake.” The band were slightly confused by this, so they stuck pictures of Ariana around his mixing desk to remind him of his raison d’être.

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Even though Girl sounds a little like a cross between the Love Island soundtrack and The Power Out by Electrelane, it’s almost genre-less. Girl Ray have created something beautiful that hasn’t been seen for a long time now: expertly-crafted pop created by dedicated artists on a mission to make music for people to really enjoy. Music that doesn’t look to confuse or patronise. Music to fall in love to, to dance to. Songs you’d want to send to your friends.

“Pop is so fun and universal, even if you’re a super muso nerd who’s into Elliot Smith you’re still going to love hearing a bit of Whitney Houston and that’s really appealing to me,” Poppy says. “If you hear a good groove you can’t not boogie, and we want our shows to be more of a party
and for it to be more feelgood music.”

“With this new set of songs they have been brave enough to completely change their sound rather than playing it safe yet still remain unmistakably themselves,” says Stephen. “A bold move perhaps, but a sign of that desire to push themselves that only the best artists have.

Originally released November 22nd, 2019

GIRL RAY – ” Girl “

Posted: February 24, 2020 in CLASSIC ALBUMS, MUSIC
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“Girl” is the second album from the North London band Girl Ray, via Moshi Moshi Records. Recorded at Electric Beach Studios in Margate with Ash Workman (Christine and the Queens, Metronomy), the album is a delightful, sun-kissed tribute to their love of pop and R&B.

It was Ariana Grande’s explosion into pop culture that kickstarted a new era for Girl Ray, as well as the realisation that their most-listened-to Spotify playlists contained pure pop music. When Poppy began experimenting with writing songs on a computer using keyboards, a collection of shimmering, foot-tapping, sparkling pop bangers poured out. With this new set of songs, Girl Ray have been brave enough to completely change their sound rather than play it safe, yet still remain unmistakably themselves – it’s Girl Ray, but with added synths.

If their debut, Earl Grey, was a hot cup of tea and a cuddle on the sofa,Girl is being in a cab with the windows down on the way to a beach bar for sundowners. It’s the excitement of Rihanna’s If It’s Lovin’ That You Want, combined with the eye-rolling, impenetrable sardonic humour of a girl gang. Among the grin-inducing, trepidatious and intensely courageous R&B-style tracks on the album, are also beautifully composed piano ballads steeped in the sadness and unrequited love that made Earl Grey feel like a knowing look from an old friend.

Girl is expertly-crafted pop, created by dedicated artists on a mission to make music for people to really enjoy. Music that doesn’t look to confuse or patronise. Music to fall in love to, to dance to. Songs you’d want to send to your friends. They have used the universal, happy medium of pop music to put across joyous, accessible messages of love, friendship and life to the world, like some of the best songwriters before them.

 

North London trio Girl Ray have announced a new album, Girl, and shared a video for its first single, “Show Me More.” Girl is due out November 8th via Moshi Moshi. They’ve also announced some UK tour dates. Watch the “Show Me More” video below.

Girl Ray features Poppy Hankin (guitar/vocals), Iris McConnell (drums), and Sophie Moss (bass). “Girl” is their second album, the follow-up to their cleverly titled 2017-released debut album, Earl Grey  which was one of the Top 15 Debut Albums of 2017 .

Girl was recorded at Electric Beach Studios in Margate with Ash Workman (Christine and the Queens, Metronomy). Whereas their debut album was a twee-pop gem, Girl is inspired by more modern and electronic pop sounds, in particular Rihanna and Ariana Grande. Crusoe Weston directed the “Show Me More” video, which features the band riding around on bikes.

In a press release the band say “Show Me More” is about “crushing really hard but having to play the long game and wait it out because your boo is playing savage games. It’s your classic pop banger. Steamy dance floor. Drinks on me.”

Show Me More is Girl Ray’s brand new single, taken from their forthcoming album ‘Girl’ out on 8th November via Moshi Moshi Records.

15th November 2019 – Rock City Nottingham w/ Metronomy,  22nd February 2020 – Nottingham, Bodega

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Teenage sensations Girl Ray draw heavy influence from the classic indie era of C86 and bring all that lofi goodness bang up to date. The North London indie trio specialising in wan, winsome heartache have ambitions to rival the song writing greats. Having just released their first LP , they now headline their shows giving you the chance to hear the new material live. Catch them live .

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This last summer saw the release of their debut album Earl Grey. Released through cult indie label Moshi Moshi, it is receiving widespread critical acclaim and is becoming the underground album of the year.

The idea that actual teenagers made an album this sharp and sophisticated and interesting is the kind of thing that should make the rest of us feel bad. – Stereogum

Girl Ray tickets

Girl Ray makes self-proclaimed “estrogen pop” that seems to exist outside of time. Though heavily indebted to harmonious crooners and jangly indie acts of the 60’s and 70’s, Girl Ray creates a sound that’s fresh, ambitious and all their own. Poppy Hankin’s vocal delivery is calm and collected, forming a spirited juxtaposition to her biting lyrical wit.

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Band Members:
Poppy Hankin – Vocals and Guitar
Sophie Moss – Bass and Vocals
Iris O’Connell – Drums and Vocals
Mike O’Malley – Guitar and Keys
Released March 15, 2018

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It starts slowly as if nothing is actually happening but be patient because it eventually breaks out into a lovely slab of lilting Gorky-style orchestral pop that floats along as if on the softest of breezes. Lovely.

This trio of teens from Wales deliver bouncy, breathless pop that sounds like part bucolic beauty and part wild overgrown garden. Elements of Gorky’s Zygotic Mynci and Kevin Ayres lend excitement to Earl Grey and make them a band I’m excited to see what comes next for them.

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Girl Ray

Superb C86 era retro indie but that’s doing this brand new group a bit of a disservice, as the unusual arrangements and excellent lyrics make this unique and fresh sounding. This is bouyant, charming, charismatic pop!

Girl Ray are based in North London, are Poppy Hankin (vocals, guitar), Iris McConnell (drums), Sophie Moss (bass).

Girl Ray make sweetly sour lo-fi heartache pop with vocals wavering between cool and callow and songwriting ambitions towards the accomplished. Their latest single, Stupid Things “about crushing really hard on someone, and finding myself doing fucking ridiculous things, like watching films that they mentioned fleetingly or ordering their favourite drink at a bar”, according to songwriter Hankin it could be a cover version of a Carole King song by a C86 type Indie Band Something about the quality of the production, the sound, the way the instruments are played and the spaces between them, suggests 1972. “It wasn’t purposefully indie or lo-fi,” explains Hankin, who met the other Girl Ray-ers at Finchley’s Fortismere school, where they were a few years below Jess Glynne (and a few decades below Ray Davies of the Kinks). “We weren’t exactly trying hard to do it, that’s just how I wrote the song and the way it was produced.” Lovers of 1972 might recognise the first two seconds of the piano intro, a recreation of the (guitar) opening to Julie Burchill’s all-time favourite song. “We gave a copy of Todd Rundgren’s I Saw the Light to the mixing guy as reference.

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Girl Ray came together through a shared love of pop from Rundgren to Cate Le Bon and a shared loathing of “the stuff the girls in our class liked, “That and just being really cool,” deadpans drummer McConnell. Naming themselves punningly after the avant garde artist Man Ray, they performed their first gig in south London. “It was absolutely terrible,” Hankin says. “We were so out of tune.”

Soon, Moshi Moshi – the small label that has released records by Florence + the Machine, Hot Chip and Lykke Li – signed them, and the band released their debut album this summer.

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London-trio Girl Ray’s rise has been pretty much metoric. The band only formed two years ago, but now signed to Moshi Moshi Records, they’ve recently put out their debut album “Earl Grey”, to massed critical acclaim. Following that release, the band have taken a brief break from playing basically every music festival going, and shared the video to new single, Don’t Go Back At Ten.

New cut ‘Don’t Go Back At Ten’ is a bittersweet offering, matching those chirpy, upbeat guitar lines with a downbeat vocal.

Poppy Hankin: “After a break-up I was super low, and as clichéd and teen-movie as it sounds, it was truly my friends who got me through it, making sure that I didn’t just mope about the whole time eating pots of cottage cheese and crying. I guess I wrote this one to cheer myself up in a way. Not many of the songs on the album are happy but this one is, kinda!”

The video is a nostalgic blast of early 00’s inspiration, that will either be a throwback to your formative years, or make you feel very old that anyone can feel nostalgic for such recent days. Musically, Don’t Go Back At Ten is one of the album’s highlights, scratchy electric guitars, steady drums and pulsing bass making for a winning backing to Poppy’s creative vocal melodies. Already one of the year’s break-out indie-pop acts, Girl Ray are showing no sign of slowing down anytime soon.

The official video for Girl Ray’s ‘Don’t Go Back at Ten’ which features on their debut album ‘Earl Grey’, out now on Moshi Moshi Records:

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With some of the best harmonies in town are surely owned by North London trio Girl Ray, luckily with their latest announcement we can all be practising these harmonies all summer along, as they announce the new album  “Earl Grey” will be released on August 4th with Moshi Moshi Records.

The album is set to feature the brilliant track ‘Stupid Things’ as well as long-time favourite ‘Ghosty’. Recorded at Margate’s Big Jelly Studios over two “insane and intense” weeks the album also features new cut ‘Preacher’ which the band have shared below.

Poppy Hankin said of the track “I wrote the melody for the first part a few years ago on a little toy Elvis guitar that I bought in a charity shop. Its tuning was really weird, and this song was the only thing I could really get out of it. The melody suited a love song, so I went with it.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IdD2P2AD3jc

Band Members
Poppy
Sophie
Iris

Girl Ray

Girl Ray an indie-pop trio from London, craft subtle, winsome songs about teenage romance and youthful angst. On their latest single, “Stupid Things,” they evolve this sound into something more complex yet equally youthful. In its solitary piano and lovelorn refrain, “Stupid Things” nods to the balladry of female singers like Carole King and Carly Simon, yet feels slightly off-kilter—less an homage to these 1970s stars than a rethinking of their classic sound. Singer/guitarist Poppy Hankin has an alluring, peculiar singing voice; her tone is at once lulling yet high and boyish, relaxing yet tense. Here, she he channels it into downtrodden whispers (“It was just to feel close to you/I’ve never done so many stupid things”) against a loose, groovy bassline, playing with her pitch until it’s dissonant against the slinky melody.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nDaL0isRQk8

 Stupid Things is “about crushing really hard on someone, and finding myself doing fucking ridiculous things, like watching films that they mentioned fleetingly or ordering their favourite drink at a bar”, according to songwriter Hankin In this contrast, Girl Ray captures how fleeting, heart-wrenching, and ultimately self-deprecating young love can be. the band is made up of Iris McConnell (drums), Sophie Moss (bass).

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Other Girl Ray tracks include Trouble – about “turning into someone you don’t like” – with its popping bassline and pop harmonies over endearingly ramshackle percussion; the dolorous Where Am I Now, on which you can hear why Hankin, has been described as the Finchley Nico;