
Folk B*tch Trio announce debut album Now Would Be A Good Time, out July 25 via Jagjaguwar
PRAISE FOR Folk Bitch Trio
“Boygenius if it was from the 40's or something”
“When three voices slot in together just right, there’s really nothing quite like it.”
“Design a new folk-pop sensation? Oh wait, it already exists”
“There’s just something so delightfully unexpected about a group whose music is resplendent in such gorgeous harmonies and confessional songwriting having such a prickly name. Folk Bitch Trio wish to upend expectations.”
“There is a playful air to Melbourne’s Folk Bitch Trio, a group that serves its laid-back acoustic sound with a shot of vodka rather than a cup of coffee... Gracie Sinclair, Jeanie Pilkington and Heide Peverelle sing of bad habits and moments of weakness as their harmonies lock together and their spirits carry them through to the next untimely slip-up”
“[Folk Bitch Trio is] the latest treasure in a long ancestry of folk ministers.”
“Compelling storytellers on and off-stage”
“Folk Bitch Trio are something else”
FOLK BITCH TRIO
Now Would Be A Good Time LP
out July 25 via Jagjaguwar
PRE-SAVE / PRE-ORDER HERE
LP TRACKLIST
1. God’s A Different Sword
2. Hotel TV
3. The Actor
4. Moth Song
5. I’ll Find A Way (To Carry It All)
6. Cathode Ray
7. Foreign Bird
8. That’s All She Wrote
9. Sarah
10. Mary’s Playing The Harp
‘Cathode Ray‘ is out now, buy/stream it here.
Folk Bitch Trio — the Melbourne/Naarm-based band of Gracie Sinclair (she/her), Jeanie Pilkington (she/her) and Heide Peverelle (they/them) — announce their debut album, Now Would Be A Good Time, out July 25th via Jagjaguwar, and release the single/video, ‘Cathode Ray’. LISTEN + WATCH HERE + PRE-SAVE THE LP HERE.
Now Would Be A Good Time tells vivid, visceral stories. Their music sounds familiar, built on a foundation of the music they’ve loved throughout their lives–gnarled Americana, classic rock, piquant, and clear-eyed balladry. Yet the songs are modern and youthful, with the trio singing acutely through dissociative daydreams, galling breakups, sexual fantasies and media overload— all the petty resentments and minor humiliations of being in your early twenties in the 2020s.
Listening to Folk Bitch Trio, it’s clear this is a band of three distinct points of view. Pilkington grew up with two musician parents and brings formative memories of watching them perform, of listening to Gillian Welch and Lucinda Williams, and of her own imagined path as a career musician. Peverelle spends their spare time making art and furniture; those hobbies, as well as their love of pop music old and new, articulate a love for the tactile, the home-grown and the hand-made. Sinclair is the self-proclaimed jester of the group, but her taste skews dark, gothic, baroque and dramatic, expressed as a love of opera and ballet as well as musicians as wide-ranging as Patti Smith, Nirvana and Tchaikovsky. They’ve known each other since high school, and as soon as they started singing together five years ago, “the chemistry of being inspired by each other was evident from the get-go,” says Sinclair.
Following the “acidic and gorgeous” (Beats Per Minute) lead single ‘The Actor‘, dubbed a “Song You Need to Know” by Rolling Stone, today’s single, ‘Cathode Ray’ opens with caution, its first harmonies arriving in big, looping sighs. It’s vulnerable but a little menacing, with a wide open chorus and a spacious, airy beat anchoring everything. Lyrically, the song is about bodily, deeply human anxieties. “It expresses a feeling of being trapped in myself, and wanting to break out of that so violently that I’m literally talking about opening up a body viscerally,” Sinclair explains. “It’s about frustration, and knowing there’s no cheap thrill that’s going to fix that.”
WATCH: Cathode Ray (Official Music Video)
The songs on Now Would Be A Good Time were workshopped on tour and written specifically with their shared connection in mind. Recording in Auckland with Tom Healy (Tiny Ruins, Marlon Williams) during winter 2024, the band built out these songs with minimalist, idiosyncratic arrangements, and, with voices and guitar taking centre stage, recorded to tape as the final missing thread in bringing the album to life.
The strongest link between the trio, aside from friendship, is music. “We all talked about loving music when we were growing up, and knowing we wanted music to be a big part of our lives,” says Pilkington. “But for me at least, when I looked into the future, it was this relatively mysterious thing.” Joining forces as a group demystified that future. That feeling—of music as an innate calling, as opposed to hobby or folly—was justified. Folk Bitch Trio have already toured across Australia, Europe and the US, supporting bands as disparate as King Gizzard, Alex G and Julia Jacklin. They’ve signed with Jagjaguwar, a home for singular icons and iconoclasts, and found their first fans with their dazzling harmonies and acerbic lyricism that transcend genre expectations and audience lines.
Following their upcoming festival sets and headline shows across UK/EU and North America, Folk Bitch Trio are excited to announce a headline tour across Australia and New Zealand this September. For more information, see HERE.
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