Category: Uncategorized

  • Chelsea Wolfe’s interview with Ireland’s Golden Plec


    Sargent House takes great care of their bands and is really supportive of art so I feel lucky to be a part of it.”

    About to embark on a European Tour, with two dates in Ireland, Chelsea Wolfe is not the kind of sound one expects to associate with a label like Sargent House. Playing host to Irish acts like Adebisi Shank and And So I Watch You From Afar, among other considerably heavier sounding international artists.

    Wolfe’s latest offering, the nine-song “Unknown Rooms: A Collection of Acoustic Songs” is her clearest emergence from the veil and shadows that obscured her earlier work. As the album’s subtitle promises, it’s stark, but also in tune with her gothic sound; she’s accompanied by viola, violin, piano and analog synths. Her voice still conjures warped mirrors and molten candle wax, even when resounding in a room alone.

    Describing it herself, Wolfe looks upon her own sound as bipolar or as having multiple personalities. “I don’t like to stick to one genre and I like to experiment. I’m interested in contrasting reality and something more arcane… Death is something that haunts me, as a character and concept, so the subject makes its way into a lot of my music.”

    “Unknown Rooms” is a far cry from what we can expect from Chelsea Wolfe in the coming year when Wolfe will deliver her fourth album, which will expand upon the acoustic record’s themes. The new full-length will mark a significant change as Wolfe and Chisholm (who makes glitched goth-soul as Revelator) bring more electronic elements into the fold

    “It was a way for us to bring together a lot of unreleased acoustic songs and while we did that I ended up writing new acoustic songs so they all live together on that album.”

    Shifting herself from Northern California down to LA hasn’t changed her outlook on music though, influences aren’t based on location for Wolfe, but life experiences. “Living in LA has allowed me more time and space and energy to work on my music, but my influences come from the same place as when I lived in Northern California. Life, death, love, nature, cinema, books.”

    Visually Chelsea Wolfe is known for her artwork and consistently updated website where her image considerably changes. “I work with a photographer (an old friend) named Kristin Cofer a lot (photo above by her). We’ve worked together for so many years that now we’re just comfortable experimenting and trying out ideas with photos and visuals.”

    Whether she brings these visuals across in her live set is yet to be seen but the photos she associates with her music tell a story as much as her lyricism. A concept found on the cover of her acoustic album, a narrative found throughout her career. “For the ‘Unknown Rooms’ cover we rented a room at an old sort of abandoned hotel in the bay area of California that used to be a brothel. Each room is named after a different woman who used to live and work there and it feels very full (sic) of energy and stories.
    Chelsea Wolfe plays the Sugar Club on April 24th as part of her European Tour.

    SEE ALL CHELSEA WOLFE TOUR DATES HERE

  • Chelsea Wolfe European & Russian Headline tour dates announced

    image

    Chelsea Wolfe’s European headline tour is now announced in full. She will be combining her sets of acoustic and electric songs for these very special shows, she will also be playing Russia and Ireland for the first time. Before leaving California she will play at this year’s Desert Daze Festival out in Mecca, CA on April 20th. Upon her return to the States she will be flying in to New York for a special show with Swans for the Northside Music Festival on June 13th.

    SEE ALL SHOW DETAILS AND UPDATES HERE.

    Apr 20, 2013 – Mecca, CA @ Desert Daze Festival 

    CHELSEA WOLFE EU 2013
    Apr 24, 2013 – Dublin, Ireland @ The Sugar Club
    Apr 25, 2013 – Belfast, N. Ireland @ Auntie Annie’s Porterhouse
    Apr 27, 2013 – Praha, Czech Republic @ Lucerna Music Bar
    Apr 28, 2013 – Berlin, Germany @ Kantine am Berghine
    Apr 29, 2013 – København, Denmark  @ Vega
    Apr 30, 2013 – Stockholm, Sweden @ Debaser Medis
    May 02, 2013 – Oslo, Norway @ Bla
    May 03, 2013 – Lund, Sweden @ Mejeriet
    May 04, 2013 – Hamburg, Germany @ Uebel & Gefährlich
    May 05, 2013 – Aachen, Germany @ Autonomes Zentrum
    May 06, 2013 – Antwerp, Belgium @ Trix
    May 07, 2013 – Paris, France @ Le Point Ephemere
    May 08, 2013 – Diksmuide, Belgium @ 4AD
    May 09, 2013 – London,UK @ Cargo
    May 10, 2013 – Leeds, UK  @ The Cockpit
    May 11, 2013 – Glasgow, UK @ King Tuts Wah Wah Hut
    May 12, 2013 – Manchester, UK @ The Deaf Institute
    May 13, 2013 – Utrecht, Netherlands @ Tivoli
    May 14, 2013 – Arnhem, Netherlands @ Willemeen
    May 16, 2013 – Zürich, Switzerland @ Bogen F
    May 17, 2013 – Milan, Italy @ Lo Fi Club
    May 18, 2013 – St Petersburg, Russia @ Skif Festival
    May 19, 2013 – Moscow, Russia @ 16 Tons Club

    Jun 13, 2013 – Brooklyn, NY@ Warsaw – Northside Music Festival w/ Swans

  • Chelsea Wolfe’s first wave of headlining European tour dates, Desert Daze & Northside Music Festival plays Announced

    image

    Chelsea Wolfe will be heading back over to Europe this Spring for a headlining run where she will be combining her sets of acoustic and electric songs for some very special shows. More EU dates are still to be added in the coming weeks, so stay tuned for updates. Before leaving California she will also be playing at this year’s Desert Daze Festival out in Mecca, CA and up on her return she will be flying in to New York for a special show with Swans for the Northside Music Festival on June 13th.

    SEE ALL SHOW DETAILS AND UPDATES HERE.

    Apr 20, 2013 – Mecca, CA @ Desert Daze Festival 

    CHELSEA WOLFE EU 2013
    Apr 24, 2013 – Dublin, Ireland @ The Sugar Club
    Apr 25, 2013 – Belfast, N. Ireland @ Auntie Annie’s Porterhouse
    Apr 27, 2013 – Praha, Czech Republic @ Lucerna Music Bar
    Apr 28, 2013 – Berlin, Germany @Kantime am Berghine
    Apr 29, 2013 – København, Denmark  @ Vega
    Apr 30, 2013 – Stockholm, Sweden @ Debaser Medis
    May 02, 2013 – Oslo, Norway @ Bla
    May 03, 2013 – Lund, Sweden @ Mejeriet
    May 04, 2013 – Hamburg, Germany @ Uebel & Gefaehrlich
    May 05, 2013 – Aachen, Germany @ Autonomes Zentrum
    May 06, 2013 – Antwerp, Belgium @ Trix
    May 07, 2013 – Paris, France @ Le Point Ephemere
    May 08, 2013 – Diksmuide, Belgium @ 4AD
    May 09, 2013 – London,UK @ Cargo
    May 10, 2013 – Leeds, UK  @ The Cockpit
    May 11, 2013 – Glasgow, UK @ King Tuts Wah Wah Hut
    May 12, 2013 – Manchester, UK @ The Deaf Institute
    May 13, 2013 – Utrecht, Netherlands @ Tivoli
    May 14, 2013 – Arnhem, Holland @ Willemeen
    May 15, 2013 – Strasbourg, France @ CEEAC
    May 16, 2013 – Zürich, Switzerland @ Bogen F
    May 17, 2013 – Milan, Italy @ Lo Fi Club

    Jun 13, 2013 – Brooklyn, NY@ Warsaw – Northside Music Festival w/ Swans

  • NYLON: Live session with Chelsea Wolfe from Black Gold

    image

    Here at NYLON TV, we love Chelsea Wolfe. Not only have we been listening to Unknown Rooms since it came out, we also admire her fashion abilities – this girl can pull of anything. (Including that amazing nose pincher she’s wearing in our video…) So, when she was in town to play her sold-out show at Music Hall of Williamsburg, we were on it. Come with us inside Black Gold, our favorite record store in Brooklyn, for a total shiver-inducing performance of Appalachia. Check out Black Gold here

    Featured Music: Chelsea Wolfe – ‘Appalachia’ Also, check out the band crush we did with her a bit ago here.

  • CVLT Nation: Live Video from Toronto

    image

    image

    What you have here below is 5:15 of visual & sonic ear candy. It’s Chelsea Wolfe & King Dude performing together in Toronto. On the real, I had to watch this footage on repeat because it’s that fucking good! The way this video is shot adds even more mood to these already very moody compositions. After the jump, check out this cryptic noir performance by Chelsea Wolfe & King Dude, plus a couple of surprises!

    See More at CVLT Nation

    Photo above by Daniel Ahrendt

  • WORK Magazine Los Angeles Show Review & Photos

    image

    image

    I had the pleasure of seeing Chelsea Wolfe last Friday night at the first Unitarian Church. Chelsea appeared on the stage like a ghost, an ethereal beauty with long dark hair & gentle movements. The church had an intense red glow to it & candles burned on what felt like every surface of the stage. No one cheered or spoke. It was completely silent—& then she started to play.

    image

    It felt like everyone held their breathe while she played & exploded into claps after each song, gasping for their next breath. Her shyness between songs made it feel like you were in a room with a friend, someone showing you a secret. 

    image

    When her set was complete, the crowd became alive, begging her for more. She returned to the stage, dark hair covering her eyes but a huge smile showing. She requested they turn down the lights—& it was perfect again as she closed the night with her beautiful & hauntingly dark mystical folk. Pick up her new acoustic album immediately.

    image
  • Cultist: Goes to Church with Chelsea Wolfe – Interview & Photos

    image

    image

    Not to be all LA and vain and superficial, but Chelsea Wolfe‘s complexion is like a cold glass of whole milk. And her voice — it sounds like how it feels to gulp down said beverage, or maybe a White Russian, on a sweltering summer day, inducing the kind of savage, glugging sounds that offend some types of people (not our kind of people), sitting cross-legged and bra-less on an abandoned rooftop in Detroit, wearing nothing but a virginal vintage slip dress, partially-laced combat boots, chipped red nail polish, and an armload of clinking bracelets stacked almost to the elbow. (I guess, although I’ve never been to Detroit.)

    Standing in a fluorescent-lit corridor of the First Unitarian Church of Los Angeles, it’s hard not to stare at Chelsea.  She is tall and pale and piercing, her jet black hair, feathery fur coat and generously-inked eyeliner are dark and elegant like a crow’s plumes; her shadowy silhouette broken only by a plastic cup containing a Barbie-pink cocktail that she holds in skull-ringed hands. Cramped between the main stage and “backstage,” which is more like a modest sitting area with nothing pretty to look at (present company excepted) and more often frequented by a totally different kind of worshipper, Chelsea and I talk death, John Cusack, Fashion Week,  and superstition.  She is on tour with her latest album Unknown Rooms: A Collection Of Acoustic Songs, and with moody vocals that instinctively oscillate between frozen and hearth-like, turning us to ice and then soothing our goosebumps, it is fair to say that on a rainy Friday evening in an unassuming Church in a no-good block of Los Angeles, Chelsea Wolfe is pretty much perfect. Even without the plastic bottle of vodka in my purse.

    Since I’m awkward, I’m going to start out this interview with a story that makes me sound like a stalker. Today was rainy and gloomy and I was under blankets listening to Unknown Rooms and thinking about how when I hear your music I picture you wearing a flowing dress and walking into the water, and how much that visual reminds of the movie The Hours. Then, I saw one of your songs is called “Virginia Woolf Underwater” and I was really tripped out. What’s that’s about?

    I’ve used that image of me walking into the water two times now. One of my earlier influences as a girl was literature. Writers, poets, Virginia Woolf, Sylvia Plath. I definitely related to them in their familiar darkness, and way of understanding the world. I think that image is something that has been burned into my mind. Both directors I’ve worked with have caught onto that. I didn’t suggest it, they came up with it. It’s interesting that you picked up on that, too.

    Sort of a morbid fascination? 

    I definitely have a sort of obsession, well maybe not as much of an obsession as an infatuation, with death. One of the first films I was really taken aback by and drawn to is the The Seventh Seal. The character of death is so distinct and specific, and I was always really attracted to, and inspired by, that. Over the years, I’ve been fortunate to never experience the death of anyone close to me. As I’ve gotten older, I’ve still never experienced it. I guess I’ve become infatuated with it, the experience of what it would be like to lose someone, and what it would be like to die, and  just dealing with all of that. That’s probably why a lot of my songs deal with death, because I’ve never dealt with it and I’m  still trying to understand it.

    I get that. Trying to figure out what it all means. Are you a superstitious person? Do you believe in signs?

    I find myself being superstitious, and then the reasonable side of me will kick in and try and stomp that out. I definitely have an inclination toward being superstitious, but I try not to be. I try to look at things in a reasonable and truthful way.

     

    Is there anything special or symbolic for you about performing in a church? I feel like it’s the perfect venue for you. 

    Well, honestly, it was always a dream to play in unconventional spaces. I always wanted to do a tour of churches and funeral homes. This tour happened to book a lot of old churches, which I was really happy with. Especially the Unitarian church, because it’s not as religious, and there isn’t a big cross behind me, and there’s not as many religious connotations. It’s more about a unique, beautiful space to play in, and the acoustics are really nice. I’m really interested in playing in any sort of unique and interesting space. Traditional venues are nice sometimes, but I really like to change things up with spaces like this.

    Are you religious?
    No. I consider myself a spiritual person, in the sense that I want to recognize that there’s a spiritual realm and that there’s something else going on. It’s not specific.  There’s not any particular religion that I grew up with.

    Do you ever feel limited creatively? Are you interested in pursuing other creative outlets?
    I don’t feel limited, because I feel like anyone can try any art form if they want. I’m not very talented as far as painting and drawing, and I really admire people who are. I don’t feel held back by that, though. I love photography and video, it’s definitely something I explore in my free time. I don’t think I’m great at it, but it’s fun for me to do something that’s more visual and more hands on in that way. Generally, when I write music, I don’t think about it being for this album or that album, I just write in a really instinctual, natural way. Once the song is finished, it might fit in a certain album, or it might not. I have a lot of songs that just sit there forever on my recorder or my computer or wherever it was recorded.

    What kind of visuals and images are you drawn to?

    I really love stuff that’s raw. I’ve always loved Nan Goldin’s style of photography. It’s so real. Not always the most perfect or beautiful image, but you can find so much beauty it in if you think about it and look more closely. I love a lot of different directors for different reasons. Ingmar Bergman, for the stark feel of it. And John Waters is so fun, flamboyant, and colorful. I’m interested in a wide range of visuals, literature and art. I really just experiment. Maybe one day I’ll try and do something serious with it.

    Your aesthetic is sort of synonymous with you as an artist and a musician. Each image I see of you is really powerful. Is that important to you, the visual image that you portray?

    Yea. It hasn’t always been very purposeful, and it’s still usually not. I don’t go into a photoshoot thinking about it. I haven’t done many videos, so I don’t think about that, but usually with photos I’m trying to tell a story. I’m not thinking about trying to match an image up with my music, I’m really just experimenting.
    I happen to have a lot of really good friends who are great photographers, so it’s been really fun to experiment with them, and sometimes it doesn’t work and sometimes it turns out looking really powerful. It’s been years of experimenting and having fun with photographer friends.

    Any dream collaborations?

    Oh man. So many. I’d love to do soundtracks with Werner Herzog, his soundtracks are always amazing. I’d also love to do something with someone who is probably harder to reach, like Vincent Gallo. The possibilities are endless. I don’t limit myself in any capacity and I’m always very open to whatever comes my way.

    Any surprising or unexpected career twists living in LA, the land of the celebrity? 

    Not in any celebrity sense. It’s definitely been good for me to live here, I’ve been here for about two years.

    Ugh. I didn’t really mean to say celebrity, that kind of just slipped out. Oh god, I just sounded like one of those sleazy journalists asking if you’ve fucked any famous people. But have you fucked any famous people?
    I know what you meant though, I was trying to think of something for you. Well, someone said that John Cusack was coming tonight, so that’s kind of rad and funny. In reality though, moving to LA has been really good for me because people like to get things done here. That’s my mindset as well. I like to work, I like to work fast, I like to get things done, and record a lot of things, and do a lot of projects at once. I’ve found a lot of people here are in the same mind frame, that’s probably why since I’ve moved here I’ve been doing more touring and visual art. I’ve come across a lot of great people who feel that way and have similar interests.

    I think that’s interesting that you feel that way, because I’m born and raised in LA and I feel kind of opposite. 

    I guess I’ve been kind of lucky with my record label Sargent House. I was really fortunate to start working with them about a year after I moved out here. They’re all about getting shit done and moving forward, and they’re really down to earth. My manager Cathy Pellow has been a dream to work with. My experience here has been great so far.

    Do you remember the moment in your career when you all of the sudden realized that people were starting to take notice? 

    Maybe just when I started touring more. Before, I didn’t really have the confidence or the means to go on tour for long periods of time. Now that I’ve been doing that consistently, I’ve noticed that I’m better able to connect with people. When you see someone perform live you can connect with them and talk to them. It’s been a gradual thing, playing more and going to more cities.

    Is it bizarre to have a dark and moody and brooding and gothy stage persona, and then to be this sweet, soft-spoken, non-intimating person in real life?
    I guess I don’t personally feel like I come across as cold. Or maybe I do, and I just don’t really notice. I definitely am  a moody person, so that’s true to life. Sometimes it’s frustrating, because I can go up and down so fast. But, generally, I really like people and appreciate when they come to shows, and want to talk to anyone who wants to talk to me.

    What’s the deal with that piece of jewelry? (referring to piece on nose)

    It’s just this piece from Margiela that I fell in love with and hunted down in the store. It’s like the only thing I’ve spent money on in the last few years. I hardly ever spend money, but I fell in love with this thing and had to have it. It’s just so cool.

    You’re obviously into fashion. Are you bummed out that you’re not at Fashion Week?

    I don’t think I would do very well there. I would go play a show, if I was offered. I was actually invited to play a show, but it was tonight. I don’t do well with crowds when I don’t have a specific purpose. I don’t think I’d do well just wandering around, I’m not very good at just hanging out. I like to be working and doing something creative. I definitely love clothes. I’m not always hip to exactly what’s in fashion, but I love clothes and silhouettes and discovering different designers that I really love. I think there’s so much good shit out there right now, from Etsy to what’s on the runway right now.

  • Recent Roll: Chelsea Wolfe in Austin photos by John Prolly

    22710013

    Over the past year, I’ve become a huge fan of Chelsea Wolfe and her dark, melodic folk music. Her previous two albums have been on heavy rotation and everyone I turn onto her, falls in love. Two weeks ago, I had the pleasure of seeing her perform live at the Central Presbyterian Church in Austin, one of the best venues in town for a show like this. That night, the church echoed with a powerful performance by Wolfe and her band.

    Keep on top of her extensive touring here, pick up her music at your local shop or here – Text and all photos by John Prolly – see more pictures below.

    22710012

    22710018

    22710019

    22710004

  • Chelsea Wofe “Flatlands” Video

    image
    Check out the new Chelsea Wolfe video for Flatlands from her album “Unknown Rooms” below, made as part of the Converse / Decibel Magazine series. Also check out the February Issue of Decibel Magazine with Chelsea on the back cover! We want to give a big thanks to Charlene Bagcal for taking the photo above and for directing the video and of course much love to all the crew that worked on it!

    Don’t miss Chelsea Wolfe out now on her headline Acoustic tour
    See all show details HERE

    CHELSEA WOLFE
    1/25 Philadelphia, PA – Side Chapel First Unitarian Church ! early SOLD OUT
    1/25 Philadelphia, PA – Side Chapel First Unitarian Church ! late  SOLD OUT
    1/26 Brooklyn, NY – Music Hall of Williamsburg ! & w/ Starred
    1/28 Washington, DC – The Rock & Roll Hotel w/ Starred
    1/29 Chapel Hill, NC – Local 506
    1/30 Atlanta, GA – The Earl
    1/31 Baton Rouge, LA – Spanish Moon
    2/01 Houston, TX – Fitzgerald’s w/ Sarah Jaffe
    2/02 Austin, TX – Central Presbytrian Church
    2/03 Dallas, TX – House of Blues – Cambridge Room
    2/05 Phoenix, AZ – The Crescent Ballroom w/ Sarah Jaffe
    2/06 San Diego, CA – The Loft At UCSD w/ Sarah Jaffe
    2/08 – Los Angeles, CA – First Unitarian Church w/ Deradoorian & Sarah Jaffe

    ! = w/ King Dude