Total Guitar

Interview: Lucy Rose

this london-based singer-songwriter donned her troubadour cap, travelling to south america to find inspiratio­n for her new album, Something’sChanging

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In early 2016 Lucy Rose found herself in a post-touring slump. The Midlandsbo­rn artist’s second album WorkItOut had been released on Columbia and had hit the Top 10 the year before, but by the following spring, she was lost, feeling disconnect­ed from music-making, her audience and a world that seemed to be worsening by the day. When she stumbled across the fact that the location with the most streams of her music on Spotify was Mexico City, a plan began to form. Why not meet those people? Why not use social media to actually socialise? A call was put out to South American fans: book Lucy for a gig, put her up at your house and she would come and play your town. Not everyone thought it was a good idea…

“I knew I had fans there, but in terms of actual promoters booking me, no one believed it,” says Lucy. “So, you know when someone tells you, ‘No’ and it makes you want to do it a million times more? I haven’t even ever said that out loud, or admitted it to myself before, but the fact that a lot of people said, ‘I don’t think you should do this’ made me want to do it a million times more.”

A tour of sorts was booked taking in Mexico, Ecuador, Peru, Chile, Argentina, Paraguay, Brazil and Uruguay, playing shows everywhere from fans’ houses to a laundrette. While Work It Out was heavily electronic, the DIY nature of the trip meant that Lucy had no choice but to take a Martin LX1E (AKA the Little Martin) and little else in order to play the shows.

“I was going out and just playing my acoustic guitar and playing what people wanted,” recalls Lucy. “Every night people would ask for like, Shiver and Night

Bus and Gamble and all of these really acoustic songs. I feel like it was the first time that I really accepted that I am a folk-country artist and proud to be and… you know, let’s get the old pedal steel on!”

That realisatio­n, along with the endless food for thought that came from forming genuine connection­s with these fans-turned-friends, brought the renewed creative vitality, purpose and beautiful acoustic tones so evident on new album Something’s Changing. “I guess it gave me my perspectiv­e back,” says Lucy. “It’s like I had a new set of glasses that made me see everything differentl­y and positively. Everywhere I went there was sadness and huge happiness at the same time. A lot of the songs on this album come from all the different things that I’ve seen, and they’re touching on topics that are a little tricky, but there’s also a positive feel to it.”

Lead single Floral Dresses is exhibit number one, in this respect, challengin­g embedded societal sexism, with a pastoral ballad layered with guest harmonies from The Staves. The chorus – ‘I don’t wanna wear your floral dresses/ And my lips won’t be coloured/ I don’t want your diamond necklace/ Your disapprova­l cuts through’ – rejecting a mould that’s often not purposeful­ly malicious but nonetheles­s imposed on women the world over.

“It’s present everywhere,” says Lucy. “Like if I go into a venue and my husband, who’s my tour manager says, ‘Hey, can we have a DI box at the front, I’m going to need two vocal mics here and here’, the sound engineer goes, ‘No problem, fine.’ If I go in and say exactly the same thing it’s like, ‘Oh, she’s bossy!’ It’s not anyone’s individual fault, it’s just where the world is right now.”

It’s indicative of a broader theme throughout the album, summarised on I Can’t Change It All – that while the world might seem unfathomab­ly bleak at times, doing something as an individual can and will make a difference: whether it’s getting up and leaving the house, playing the show, writing the song, putting a face to a username, challengin­g assumption­s or simply showing your support for others.

“Travelling was really empowering,” acknowledg­es Lucy. “Because the problems are so big, I was looking for something to do. It’s like that story of all the starfish washed up on the beach and there are these two men walking down there. One of the guys picks up a starfish and throws it back in the sea. His friend goes, ‘Why did you do that? What difference does it make?’ And he says, ‘Well, it makes a difference to that one.’ That’s how I felt… Something’s changed, but it’s really just the beginning.”

Something’sChanging is out 7 July via Communion Music. Lucy will play UK dates in the same month. More info: www.lucyrosemu­sic.com

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