GNI MAG ISSUE 48 - Calum Scott

Page 33

INTERVIEW // KAWLA

it just didn’t feel right, especially after the year and a half that we’ve all just had. So a mixtape felt like the best option, as it’s somewhere between an EP and an album, but still has that progression we wanted. It worked really well, as when we looked at the new songs we had come up with alongside the older tracks, they just complimented each other perfectly. It was under our noses the whole time. It’s a soundtrack to the Summer. We need positivity right now ourselves, but so does everyone.” Naturally, frontman Jim is on completely the same wavelength as his pal, saying : “We’re really positive people and I think that shows in our music. Throughout lockdown we’ve been releasing hopeful music, just like we always have done. There’s so much sadness in the world right now, we need positive and hopeful music all the more. We want to just keep making people smile. We’ve been putting out music for three or four years now and while we’re proud of it all and we’ve had our thing, we’ve still been honing exactly what that thing is. I think with this mixtape we have really got as close as we have ever got. We had gotten a bit over-serious a while back, so this definitely reinjects the fun, the joy and the hope in our music, which is a big part of what we are about.” One of the standout tracks on Paradise Heights is undoubtedly Arms Wide Open, an instant classic the lads co-wrote with The Vaccines’ Justin Young. Jim said: “We’d been on tour with The Vaccines and George Ezra in 2019 and got to know them pretty well. We watched them play every night and were in awe of how good The Vaccines were and their songwriting. Justin is such a good writer, so when he asked if we wanted to do a song together, of course we said yes. It was great as it let us have the opportunity to write in a different way. We initially came along with some heavy indie-sounding ideas like we expected him to be wanting, but as soon as we sat down with him, we

all came up with a very pop chorus. He was really cool and had a real intelligence to his writing. It was a great experience and we couldn’t be happier with the track itself.”

like a cross between The Monkees and The Mighty Boosh (The Monkee Boosh, anyone?) and adds another string to the band’s bow that they hope will connect

Kawala’s music is rarely anything other than an exuberant and positive affair, but the sunshine in their melodies invariably is accompanied by lyrical subject matter that is much more serious. The band make a point of addressing issues such as mental health, inequality and community, but they never wallow in it, preferring instead to offer hope and solutions. Jim said: “It’s like Country music, so much of it sounds upbeat and happy, but the subject matter can often be really miserable. We like making really positive, happy-sounding Summer sounds, but sometimes the lyrics can be much more than that. We like to write about real and difficult subjects, either from our own experience or things that friends have gone through, but we always want to come from a position of ‘how can we deal with this and make things better/’, rather than just saying how awful things are. Music more than anything for us is hopeful, so that’s what we do, we make self-help songs. Primarily for ourselves, but if they help anyone else, that’s even better.” Their lighter side is front and centre in that Youtube show too. With it’s surreal and hilarious take on communal band life, Paradise Heights the series comes over

with people just as much as their music. Daniel said: “It’s something we’ve always wanted to do, as we’re big fans of comedy as well as music, but it’s such a different thing for us to do that we knew it might not connect with people, but it seems to be going down really well so far. We really like the idea that as we grow as artists, we are always going to have this series that we made that people can connect with at any time. There’s five episodes planned, but if people want more, maybe we will do a second series or a Christmas special. We did it to fill the gap for our fans that the lack of gigs had left, so when we get back to live music, will we have time? I’m not sure, but it’s a nice idea. DEBUT MIXTAPE RELEASE ‘PARADISE HEIGHTS’ OUT NOW, NOVEMBER UK TOUR

THIRTY FORTY THREE FIVE // GNIMAG.COM


Articles inside

OMAGH PRIDE

4min
pages 98-100

CASTLE WARD

1min
pages 96-97

STAYCATION

2min
pages 94-95

RECOMMENDED BY MARTY

6min
pages 92-93

PRAWNAGRAPHIC

3min
pages 90-91

JULIAN CLARY

2min
pages 88-89

MALONE LODGE

4min
pages 84-85

THE GOURMET BOYS

5min
pages 82-83

CONNOR MILLS DESIGN

4min
pages 70-71

BE A HERO

3min
page 63

TO HUG OR NOT TO HUG

4min
page 62

STORM FX

1min
pages 58-59

FOSTERING

3min
pages 60-61

PERIODS

3min
pages 54-55

ROSS KANE

2min
pages 56-57

MASSBRANDED

2min
pages 48-53

LESBIAN LOVING

2min
pages 46-47

ALEX TRUESDALE

10min
pages 34-37

KAWALA

5min
pages 32-33

CARL CONNIELINGUS

5min
pages 30-31

THE ORACLE RISING

1min
pages 24-25

MICKY MURRAY

6min
pages 19-21

INHALER

8min
pages 22-23

RYLAND JAMES

12min
pages 14-17

CALUM SCOTT

12min
pages 8-11

CALLUM SKEFFINGTON

4min
pages 12-13
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