It’s that time of year again when rain, shine and music collide to bring us the ultimate summer experience at Falls Music and Arts Festival. One of the largest events happening across the New Year period, Falls has been going strong for a quarter of a century and still never fails to amaze. The bill for the 2017/2018 tour included a bunch of stellar international names including Fleet Foxes, Run The Jewels, Vince Staples, Liam Gallagher, Foster The People, Glass Animals and The Kooks, as well as homegrown favourites like Flume, Angus and Julia Stone, Methyl Ethel, Allday, The Jungle Giants and Julia Jacklin. And that’s just a preview.
Of the four idyllic locations the festival plays, we made our annual pilgrimage to Byron Bay which delivered its usual medley of hot, balmy weather, rainy afternoons and… mud, lots of mud. Clearly it’s our favourite way to ring in the new year.
Day II saw sets from WAAX, Alex Lahey, Manu Crook$, Camp Cope, Julia Jacklin, Allday, Dune Rats, Glass Animals, Fleet Foxes and Run The Jewels.
Photos by Dani Hansen.
Check out our galleries for Day I and Day III!
WAAX
Alex Lahey
Manu Crook$
Camp Cope
Julia Jacklin
Allday
Dune Rats
Glass Animals
Fleet Foxes
Run The Jewels

Photos: Dani Hansen/Howl & Echoes
Another year around the sun, another Laneway Festival loaded with unforgettable moments we’ll be recycling until the next one rolls around. The 2017 edition saw another leading lineup take on 7 shows across 3 countries – quite a far cry from the festival’s humble beginnings 13 years ago. The Sydney leg of the tour started out with some choppy weather, which soon gave way to blue skies and sweltering heat. Rain or shine though, the weather wasn’t going to stop punters taking the day by storm.
First up on the main stage was Melbourne three-piece Camp Cope, setting the tone with some high-energy noise and 0% tolerance for rowdy hecklers. Next we moved over to Spinning Top for the always incredible/ completely hilarious Koi Child to take in our fill of that jazzy Hip Hop. This was shortly followed by the infectious NAO, who is all but the name to watch right now. The long awaited Whitney took to the stage afterwards, their gorgeous brand of country soul drawing an enormous crowd who were all too keen to experience the Chicagoans. All-time favourite Nicholas Allbrook wasted no time in jump-starting things – by jumping straight into the crowd that is. Legends Dune Rats on filler duties for an absent Young Thug came to the party and then some, with every single person chanting every lyric to every song that they belted out. Then, in stark contrast to the Dunies, the incredible Mick Jenkins took the the Future Classic stage and pelted us with some seamless lyrical finesse. King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard followed back on the main stage – a consistent crowd pleaser and a sure mosh riot, they slay every time. Seattle native Car Seat Headrest followed up his sold out Sydney sideshow with a choice set at the Spinning Top stage, with Tash Sultana then rounding out a massive crowd as the sun sat over hill, lighting up the late afternoon. A.B. Original brought a resounding “fuck you” to their stand-out spot, and Glass Animals sowed some contagious fervour around with their star stage presence as the sun started to set. Mr. Carmack was next over at Future Classic, and things got weird when the crowd overran the barrier and started dancing in the photo pit and on top of speakers, even the stage – a testament to his music and infectious style. Grammy winner Tourist shortly followed with some face-melting tunes, and then it was a quick rush back to the main stage for the one and only Tame Impala, who sprayed the crowd with confetti and delivered a truly memorable live set. Wrapping up our Laneway experience was local psych-electronic guys Jagwar Ma, who brought a hypnotic end to an enormous day of amazing live music.
We managed to capture some of the vibes that went down. Peep the shots below.
Check out Part I here, feat. Whitney, Dune Rats, Nic Allbrook & more!
Read our Laneway 2017 review!Tash Sultana
A.B. Original (with Hauie Beast)
Glass Animals
Mr. Carmack
Tourist
Tame Impala
Jagwar Ma
Photos: Dani Hansen/Howl & Echoes
The last time I saw Glass Animals live was when ZABA was new and they were still relatively unknown, save for their immediately-huge single Gooey. Just a couple years later, they’re on the Laneway main stage and selling out shows at the Enmore Theatre. Walking past the line that stretched from the entrance to the corner of the block, I reflected on just how different this show would be.
Their first show, years back, was still fairly minimal, understated, even. Tonight’s show was the opposite; decadent, decorated, overzealously fun. The Enmore Theatre is a medium-sized venue, perfect for packing a couple thousand into a show with stadium-sized energy while still evoking lovely intimacy.
Opening for the Oxford four-piece were Sydney group Polographia, an ideal opener, with their blend of live and electronic elements forming simple, dance-ready beats. They seemed to be having a great time on stage, warming up the mercifully air-conditioned crowd. Sure, they were never going to win the hearts of everyone there to see the main act, but they were warmly received, and no doubt gained a few new fans along the way.
A brief break separated acts, before the robotic tones of [Premade Sandwiches] from new album How To Be A Human Being echoed through the venue, signalling what everyone had been waiting for. Glass Animals appeared on stage and almost immediately launched into Life Itself, setting the energetic tone for the set to come. Their set is a unique combination of smooth and seductive, having crafted an incredible skill for engaging live performances that tends to provoke more club-like dancing than your average live show. Tracks from the new album dominated the set, although Zaba numbers like Black Mambo, Hazey and Gooey made their way through, no doubt still among their most popular tracks. The latter, their biggest track to date, remains to be the track which received the most cheers on the night.
The band themselves seemed to be having a lot of fun, with frontman Dave Bayley ditching his shoes about two songs in and jumping about barefoot for the remainder of the show. After a brief encore (are these really still necessary?) the band delivered a classic, Pools, and a new favourite, Pork Soda, during which a pineapple was tossed intro the crowd, hopefully not injuring anybody.
All in all, it was a pretty great gig. The crowd was 70% underage girls, but such is the nature of sideshows like that. The light setup was one of the highlights of the evening, with incredible back lighting and the occasional strobe light really adding to the atmosphere and energy of the night. If you get the chance to see these guys live, I highly recommend you take it.
Read our interview with Glass Animals
Image: Dani Hansen
Fresh from the release of their critically acclaimed sophomore album How To be A Human Being, Glass Animals have announced headline tour dates to coincide with their appearance at Laneway Festival 2017. The album is among our favourites of the year, really showcasing just how much they challenged not only their own sonic and thematic boundaries, but those which their audience had come to anticipate.
No stranger to our shores, the Oxford-based quartet were in town earlier this year, and again the previous year to support their then-new debut record Zaba.
As we’ve duly noted several times, a love Glass Animals show is a raucous, energetic affair guaranteed to leave you weak at the knees and sweaty all over – in the best way possible. Champions of both the festival set and the headline performance, we can personally guarantee this is going to be one of the standout shows of early 2017.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bhZXaWYTPoE
Glass Animals will perform headline shows in Sydney and Melbourne. Tickets go on sale on Monday, October 31.
Glass Animals Australian Tour Dates 2017
Wednesday January 25: Enmore Theatre, Sydney (all ages)
Wednesday February 1: Melbourne Town Hall, Melbourne (18+)
Laneway Festival 2017 Dates
Saturday 21 January – SINGAPORE – THE MEADOW, GARDENS BY THE BAY
Thursday 26 January – BRISBANE – BRISBANE SHOWGROUNDS, BOWEN HILLS (16+)
Saturday 28 January – MELBOURNE – FOOTSCRAY COMMUNITY ARTS CENTRE (FCAC) AND THE RIVER’S EDGE
Monday 30 January – AUCKLAND – IT’S A SECRET, WATCH THIS SPACE!
Friday 3 February – ADELAIDE – HART’S MILL, PORT ADELAIDE (16+)
Saturday 4 February – SYDNEY – SYDNEY COLLEGE OF THE ARTS (SCA), ROZELLE
Sunday 5 February – FREMANTLE – ESPLANADE RESERVE AND WEST END
Check out our new interview and photo shoot with Glass Animals
Read our review of Glass Animals’ How To Be A Human Being
Image: Danielle/Hansen / Howl & Echoes (full gallery here)
Kingswood – Creepin
The first single off their forthcoming sophomore album, Creepin is an uplifting yet melancholic anthem. Featuring their signature gritty guitar riffs, slapping drumbeats, and captivating vocals, this is a bold return from the boys. The video itself is also weirdly enchanting, featuring a range of ballet dancers who are accompanied by a freakishly face-painted ‘creep’.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qSDvchLmqnI
Torii Wolf – Body
Torii Wolf has released a seductive and meditative banger titled Body, produced by araabMUSIK. With her smooth and sultry vocals gliding through the track, the video builds upon these sentiments, but showcases the emptiness and longing one has for a past lover.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=151&v=Ge1JUaXjULc
Danny Brown – Pneumonia
Detroit’s Danny Brown has released yet another visual accompaniment from his fourth studio album Atrocity Exhibition. This time with a haunting clip for Pneumonia, the kind of horrifying experimental track sees Danny tied up in chains and flailed through the air. While we don’t entirely get what’s going on, it definitely does a good job of keeping your eyes glued to the screen.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Xs-Dc3_eiV8
Pusha T – H.G.T.V.
After teasing the tune just days ago, King Push has finally released the new track H.G.T.V alongside it’s new video. Shot entirely in portrait orientation (maybe grab your phone), the simplistic, sub bass centred beat sees Pusha T flexing his vocal skills to the max. Just goes to show, with over 20 years in the game, Pusha has still got it.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7s63y_kfWt4
Kid Cudi – Frequency
Following the previously released All In, Cudi has returned with a new video for his upcoming project. An enchanting mix of auto-tune laced choruses and in-depth rap verses, catchy is an understatement. Frequency is actually directed by Cudi himself and follows him as he traverses through a mysterious and eerie jungle like setting.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KzvywmVRWAo
Glass Animals – Season 2 Episode 3
Dropping the visual accompaniment to one of their recent album’s favourites, the video game inspired single has now gotten a video game inspired clip! Centring around a disinterested, couch-bound girl, she is soon pulled into a psychedelic video game world at the flip of a button. It’s an incredible interpretation of the video game sounds used within the tune, and if that couldn’t get any better, this game will soon be playable by fans!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x2Kwos_oWSc
The Weeknd – False Alarm
For his second music video of the album, The Weeknd has certainly gone all out. Matching the fast paced and intense nature that the single presented, the clip follows a group of bank robbers as they make their heist and getaway. It’s an incredibly violent and cinematic film for something as simple as a music video, but the result is something utterly unique and head turning in every way.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CW5oGRx9CLM
The Lumineers – Cleopatra
Is there anything more pure than a classic On Tour style music video? Probably not. There’s just something about them that’s both exciting and nostalgic and Denver outfit The Lumineers have just unveiled their version. Filled with behind the scenes footage from stadiums through through the front window of a van en-route to a show, to shots of fans and crowds, Cleopatra’s got a bit of everything and gives a glimpse into the day to day touring life of a band during the a whirlwind that is a World Tour.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ClvG58Igo9o
Hayley Kiyoko – One Bad Night
Content Warning: transmisogynistic violence
Disney-actor turned singer Hayley Kyioko has never shied away from representation of people and experiences. Her new video for the synthy and guitar driven pop-centric One Bad Night is no exception. The clip sees Donald (played by Birth of a Nation actor Kelvin Harrison Jr.) and Amber (played by trans YouTube activist Erin Armstrong) each go through a particularly rough night. After stealing a car from his valet parking job, Donald witnesses an attack on Amber and intervenes, the two strangers ending up their night together in a diner. Like her previous videos, One Bad Night is directed by Kyioko and places her LGBT+ activism at the forefront of her art.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L_wXWFnTjxU
Archivist – Everything is Wanted
Ahead of the release of their upcoming EP Memo, London electro-indie act Archivist have unveiled the video for their song Everything is Wanted. Cutting between colour and black and white, the jumpy nature of the clip fits perfectly with the song as frontman Ed Begley journeys through city and forest in an almost escapist nature. Particularly good are the slow shots of a gently wild sea, slowing things down for contemplation before urgently restarting.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u15NmuWnBtE&feature=youtu.be
Seekae – Turbine Blue
If the location for the latest video from Sydney trio Seekae seems super familiar, that’s probably because you’ve watched Grease and/orTerminator 2 a few too many times. Directed by Kris Moyes, the video was the last to be shot at the iconic location before it was demolished and follows seven people with very different dancing styles. It’s a somewhat unexpected approach a fresh vibe and lots of super pleasing, crisp blue tones.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2klcVENrEnQ&feature=youtu.be
Words by Ruby-Rose Pivet-Marsh and Martin McConnell
Image: Supplied
Continuing their reign as one of the best live acts around right now, Glass Animals took to the stage this week as musical guests on Late Night With Seth Myers.
The Oxford-based quartet just released their sophomore album How To Be A Human Being, and landed in the USA to kick off an extensive tour. Bringing their sounds to the late night masses, they performed lead single Life Itself on Seth’s stage. It’s not their first time on the show, having first performed ZABA standout single Gooey back in 2014.
https://www.facebook.com/glassanimals/posts/10153680052151152
How To Be A Human Being is certainly one of our favourite albums of 2016 so far (read our review here). It really built on what we’d come to know and love about their maiden sound, pushing the boundaries of what they can accomplish both musically and thematically.
Glass Animals visited Australia earlier this year for a quick run of headline shows. They will be returning in February 2017 to perform at Laneway Festival, and sideshows to be announced.
Check out our new interview and photo shoot with Glass Animals
Read our live review of Glass Animals in Sydney
More often than not dance music touches upon the animalistic, carnal and euphoric. The more disposable pop quality of these themes can result in more than a few upturned noses from those finding purchase with the densely biographical lyrics of singer-songwriters. Glass Animals‘ latest LP How to Be A Human Being cuts an uncommon balance between the two extremes – and how.
Populating the slinky electronic soup of debut ZABA with a rouge’s gallery of semi-fictitious characters, the quartet’s latest LP touches on some lofty creative thematics. Yes, it’s a concept album. Tieing together a grander narrative, the album tells 11 stories from the perspective of a series of fictionalised alter-egos synthesised from the group’s imagination and some nefarious characters encountered during two years of international touring.
“It’s a combination of autobiography and made up [stories], more than about any people that we met,” Dave Bayley elaborated during a recent interview with Howl & Echoes. “There were a lot of underlying themes that are in the record, and I was trying to recreate those undercurrents with new characters, and some autobiography, too.”
The LP’s psychedelic details and nebulous characterisations call back to Frank Zappa or Bob Dylan, an unlikely proposition for the group’s signature indietronica with trip-hop elements at its core. Yet as opener Life Itself demonstrate, this is something that works. There’s layers of lyrical, thematic and musical complexity to each track, perhaps best left for fans to scrutinise or uncover through their own analysis. Particularly when considering the concept that each song is about a person – a person living their own life, a person who is part fiction and part real, and therefore ultimately representative of a lot more than just a person, and also possibly interconnected with the album’s other characters as indicated by the connected video clips singles Youth and Life Itself, which adds a whole new level to it all – that their interpretations could be left up to the listener only seems fitting.
But regardless of high-minded conceptual success, How to Be A Human Being cuts infectious dance grooves and floatingly euphoric vibrations. Slow motion grooves and soulful vocal top lining have returned in abundance. More direct dance tracks like Youth stand as an inviting testament. Mama’s Gun showcases the group’s melancholy yet bubbling electronic sound at full stride. Cane Shuga’s warbling, sparse synths and delicate, electronified falsetto are the perfect sonic representation of the song’s core theme – cocaine.
For the most part, Glass Animal’s amalgam of indie sophistication and electronic proves just as infectious as anything they’ve produced so far. Even the seemingly throwaway lyrics of Pork Soda and banality of Fitter Happier-esque [Premade Sandwiches] gel smoothly with the deeper underlying pathos, urgency and despair of the album’s two most unconventional tracks. Slow groover Take a Slice and Poplar St prove the perfect vehicles for waxing lyrical alongside amidst infectious rhythms and a pervading sense of light hearted fun. While each track is honestly as phenomenal as they are diverse, the best might just have been left for last, with final track Agnes shifting the atmosphere once more, to an oddly dichotomous sound; melodically, it’s not exactly uplifting in spite of the glorious chorus and major chords, but there’s a sense of finality and farewell to it. Lyrically, it’s heartbreaking, about accepting the death (it seems to be by way of an overdose) of someone once held so close by the protagonist. Many of the songs on this album share the trickery of music that emanates something so different to the lyrics or the story, and on this final track, which could not have been anything other than this album’s final track, is a real testament to that and to Bayley’s songwriting.
From open to close, Glass Animals’ How to Be A Human Being works in some lofty conceptual undercurrents without losing speed. Glass Animals have absolutely proven themselves to be so much more than we’d already hoped; this album is a real treasure, and one of this year’s best records.
Written with Lauren Ziegler
Visit our interview and photo shoot with Glass Animals
Check out our review and photos of Glass Animals live in Sydney
Image: LinkedIn
Today sees the release of Glass Animals‘ highly anticipated sophomore record How To Be A Human Being. An intriguingly unique concept album, it marks an incredible second step for the band, whom we first met in 2014 with their debut album Zaba. Through its slinky, playfully onomatopoeic tracks like Gooey, Hazey and Pools, we were introduced to the Oxford based four-piece, and their identifiable, even signature sound – slinky, trip-hop infused beats that blend electronic production with live instrumentation. Their second album sees the band nurture and nourish that sound, building upon it with the confidence to explore and push, simultaneously introducing a complete set of stories, characters, settings and themes to each of its eleven tracks.
On a musical level, the new album is diverse, lush and surprising; much likes its predecessor, it’s an album as suited to the dance floor as it is the bedroom; equally fortuitous for the headphone listener and the party soundtracker. The band, with frontman and producer Dave Bayley in the director’s chair, has grown since Zaba. There’s more expression, more experimentation; they don’t so much as tiptoe beyond boundaries as leap above them. The result is a myriad beats and melodies that, despite remarkable distinction from one another, feel fluid and evenly spaced across forty-three minutes. On a thematic and lyrical level, there’s even more to absorb, making repeated listens both encouraged and beneficial. Each song is written from the perspective of a different person, as depicted on the album cover as well as the videos for first two singles Life Itself and Youth, also the first two tracks on the album.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yd9p4n5hLEg
Employing a refreshingly cool concept, How To Be A Human Being is essentially a collection of anecdotes. Each character has its own song, and its own story to tell. The band have toured extensively since the release of Zaba, and Bayley and band members Drew MacFarlane, Joe Seaward and Edmund Irwin-Singer found themselves caught up in more than a few strange new situations, meeting countless new and different human beings all over the world. These meetings laid the foundation and inspiration for many of these tracks – Bayley even recorded some of these conversations on his phone, which he claims began as a way to jog his self-confessed “terrible” memory.
Rather than directly creating songs about specific people, though, it was the thematic undercurrents of their stories and interactions that directed the album’s characters. “What I thought was interesting was the way people tell stories,” he says. “The way people express sadness, the themes that ran through all these stories that people tell a stranger. It was pretty weird.”
“People communicate in a weirdly optimistic way even though what they’re telling you might be really dark and heartbreaking, or very strange,” he says. “There’s a lightheartedness to the way people communicate, but it’s really significant, what they’re telling you. I just found that really amazing. A lot of it’s just a bit cheeky too. Quite fun, so you can hear these fun tales, but underneath it, there’s a much darker person.”

Curiouser still, is that the album is more than stories about people. They’re certainly not just stories about other people. “It’s a combination of autobiography and made up [stories], more than about any people that we met,” Bayley explains. “There were a lot of underlying themes that are in the record, and I was trying to recreate those undercurrents with new characters, and some autobiography, too.”
Weaving autobiographical elements into the narrative became an organic part of the project early on. “It just started happening. Funny things have happened to us, weird things happened to me and I’d think, that’d be cool to include in that character’s personality. So that happened naturally and that sort of fed into trying to write more personal songs – but I’m not gonna say which. I never thought [writing a personal record] would happen, but it makes it much easier to do on the record when the idea is that each song is this different characters. Each song has little bits of you in it, but it’s not entirely a record about yourself, which I think I would find incredibly boring to subject other people to.”
Zaba was a more abstract record, with many lyrics playing with sound more than story, and this is perhaps the biggest distinction between the two albums. How To Be A Human Being is grounded in reality, in humanity. As Bayley said, it is the closest he has come to writing a personal album, and he’s done so in fantastically sneaky manner. It’s a clever way to publicly explore and sing about one’s own life with truth and honesty, without actually pulling back the veil far enough for anyone to see who’s behind it. It also ties together the notion of what it actually means to be a human being; In spite of such divergent stories, perhaps we’re all more alike than we seem on the surface. Each character’s story may be radically distinct, but on a deeper layer they’re all connected.
The band were fascinated to discover that many of the strangers he met during a year on the road were so open and honest; as though that level of anonymity allowed strangers to be themselves. This isn’t a universal truth, in my experience, but a phenomenon often unique to the arts; you see a film, or you read a book, or you listen to an album that relates and has meaning to you. As such, you may feel close to its creator, almost like they’re your friend, or even a therapist, or a voice of authority and understanding. It’s best summarised in a quote I recently read in the graphic novel Daytripper. The protagonist, an author, has released his first novel, and it’s a smash hit. In the comic’s narratorial boxes, it reads: “It’s strange being famous. People think they know you…. [he] notices how many people greet him as if they’d already met him. They’ll skip all the preliminary questions strangers normally ask to break the ice. The book has done it already, it looked and smiled and won everybody over. The people who like the book naturally assume they’d like the author as welll. They think they know who he is. They think they’re his friends.”

This put the band in a strange new position where they were meeting hundreds of new faces, yet hearing stories that someone might not even tell their closest friends. As this continued to happen, the idea for an album of humans, of stories, came to be. Fourth track Pork Soda, for example, came from a tattoo. “It was a giant pig, a stick figure pig, a really cool pig,” Bayley says. “It said pork soda in big scrawling letters, I thought it was the best tattoo I’ve ever seen. It was this woman, she gave us a load of gifts, it was amazing, 30 little glass animals. I saw her tattoo, and I was like, ‘that’s sick – why?’ And she was like, ‘I just like pork soda,’ and I thought that was really cool, it played into the mentality of the person in that song. I just really liked the phrase.” And what exactly is pork soda? “It’s a drink. It’s a drink and it’s a meal, they put pork and cook it in coca cola in a stew. She says it’s the best meal and a drink.”
The more you listen – and the more you watch if you count the accompanying videos, which so far intertwine with one another and the overarching story – the more you learn, and the more layers you uncover. For the album to equally present both a range of colourful characters, and intimate layers of the band members themselves, ultimately presents the listener with a musical cross section of society today. And while this all may sound a little deep and philosophical, Bayley assures me that it’s still really playful and cheeky throughout – and indeed you can hear that irreverence throughout many of the album’s lyrics. “It’s meant to have weird layers, but I sound really pretentious if I start talking about it,” Bayley says. Speaking about the song Season 2 Episode 3 (with the track being the third song from their second album), he explains the cheek behind the title. “That song has ideas and layers to it but it’s just kinda cheeky. I wanted to do it “S02E03″ so it’s like, when you’re searching for the new Game of Thrones or something – I’m still on season 2, I’m catching up slowly. But it’s a nod toward the TV thing, this girl who spends her entire time watching TV, lounging around, not doing anything, being high, eating mayonnaise from a jar.”
The album itself came together almost entirely through putting down lyrics and chords first, with the production coming later. The one exception is Cane Shuga (a slang term for cocaine), which began the other way around. “That’s the only song that started as an actual beat,” Bayley says. “The production came first which was weird for this record. I’d had it lying around, been working on a series of beats and that one didn’t get used, Joe [Seaward, drummer] really liked it.” Seaward, sitting next to Bayley, grins smugly. “Yep, I’m responsible for that one.”
One of the only other anomalies on the album came by way of Seaward’s father, who contributed a flute layer to the track Mama’s Gun – “Back in the day, that was his thing,” he explains of his father. “He hadn’t done it for a while. He was really great though!” The band otherwise maintained a strict rule of only recording themselves, with no additional guests. “We broke the rule for that one song,” says Bayley. “It was a crisis to be fair – we don’t really live using samples but I really wanted to use this one sample. The context it provided as was interesting – I like using samples if they add more than just music.
“It’s a really weird Carpenters song called Mr Guder. The song is about a really odd character, and The Carpenters have an amazing history themselves – [Karen Carpenter] had terrible psychiatric problems, and that fed really nicely into the actual context of the song, Mama’s Gun. There are lots of little references to the words, and it all just fit, it just made sense. One of those things where you drop it in and it was too magical, because of what the song means and who wrote it, and it all works.
“The Carpenters let us use it, well, Mr Carpenter, but then their label wouldn’t let us put it in… So we had to replay it.”
The album may only be out today, but they’re already thinking about more. “We’ll be doing something soon, we get a bit itchy,” says Seaward. Their albums are a sacred Glass Animals-only space, but they’re open to working with others on different projects. Last year the band collaborated with rapper Joey Bada$$ for the track Lose Control, a collaboration which came about because, “We always like doing things with people who can only do stuff we can’t – we can’t rap so well, we can’t play the harp. We try working with people who can do amazing things that we’ll never be able to do. [Joey]’s one of them, he’s got an amazing sense of rhythm, it’s awesome watching him listen to music. He moves his head in a really amazing away. It’s weirdly how a lot of DJs hear music, they hear the backbeat, and Joey does that as well. A lot of rappers do the opposite, that was really cool.”
Glass Animals had already begun touring a few months before the album came out, including a short visit to Australia. Anyone who has seen Glass Animals live is no doubt familiar with the infectious energy they exude, and fans have a lot to look forward to, as a full new stage production is in the works. The biggest challenge for the band right now is perfecting the new songs live, as they’re so accustomed to performing from one album. “It’s fun to play new songs,” says Seaward. “It keeps us on our toes, we have to think – the possibility of stuff going wrong has increased exponentially, which makes us focused and engaged with each other, and it makes it slightly terrifying. By the end of the last touring cycle we’d played those songs so many times, so the chance of something going wrong was relatively high, but we knew how to deal with it if we did. Now, it’s terrifying.”
How To Be A Human Being is out now.
All images copyright Danielle Hansen / Howl & Echoes
Glass Animals have released their second new track from forthcoming album How To Be A Human Being, with the release of new track and video, Youth. The band previously released Life Itself, the clip of which starred a young boy who escapes after being kept hostage. In their video for Youth, the little boy is back as the story continues to unfold.
This video focuses on helping us piece together the relationship between the boy and the waitress at the diner. As she works, we continuously sees the boy either dancing to the upbeat track or simply watching her. She follows him when he runs out of the diner, going to the room from where he escaped and searching about the area. The band make a cameo in the video as patrons sitting in a booth, completely oblivious to what’s going on. We assume this means the visions of the boy are simply inside the waitress’s head, which tells us that the video must be viewed with an open mind and a bit of imagination.
According to NPR, the band’s frontman Dave Bayley agrees, allowing the viewer to leave it to themselves to figure out their own meaning. “I always try to leave enough space for people to make their own interpretations,” he says. “For me, that’s more interesting than having a definitive ‘correct’ explanation.”
Although, he also gave a little explanation about the heartbreaking story about a woman and her son that inspired the song. “It was one of the saddest things I’d ever heard, and she was on the verge of crying,” he says, “but she also had a sense of optimism and calm. Something in her face said she’d found a way to be happy again.”
Considering the album is said to be composed of songs largely written from the perspectives of unique individual characters, to have an ongoing storyline introducing us to each visually is remarkably interesting. Bayley has explained that while many of the stories stemmed from conversations he’s had with people met on Glass Animals’ extensive world tours, many of the details are fictitious.
“People tell you some incredible things — some totally deep, dark secrets — with a sort of cheekiness to it. They’re laughing as they’re telling you these dark, or sad, or really gross things. And even if they’re telling you a happy story, you can sense the emotion underneath that,” he said.
How To Be A Human Being will be available on August 26. Watch the video for Youth below.
Read our recent review of Glass Animals live, and check out our photo gallery here.
Image: Danielle Hansen / Howl & Echoes
We caught UK four-piece Glass Animals in town last week, while they were visiting Australia to perform a quick run of shows ahead of their upcoming sophomore album How to be a Human Being, set for release on August 26 via Caroline.
The band played to a heaving, sold out Metro Theatre in Sydney on Saturday, July 9.
Click here to read the full review of their incredible live show.
All photos: Danielle Hansen / Howl & Echoes



























































































































