Portsmouth News

Creating a safe space with her concepts

- With CHRIS BROOM

Poet and singer Arlo Parks may only be 20 but she already has a critically acclaimed album under her belt. In August 2020, Michelle Obama shared a playlist of songs that had inspired her during a recent project.

Among that list were Beyonce, Kendrick Lamar and one Arlo Parks from west London.

Aged just 20, the British singer and poet’s inclusion by the former first lady of the United States was a testament to how far her music had travelled whilst she had remained put, at her parents’ house, during the pandemic.

“It’s one of those things that is inconceiva­ble,” she says over the phone, her conversati­onal voice as lilting and soft as her singing one. ‘It still hasn’t really sunk in.’

Her debut album, Collapsed In Sunbeams, was recorded during the first months of the pandemic.

Parks booked an Airbnb to create a blank space and worked with Los Angeles-based songwriter and producer Gianluca Buccellati remotely.

It was released in January 2021 shortly after the UK was plunged into another lockdown, reaching number three in the charts.

So while Parks has been tucked away at home, her profile has grown to previously unimaginab­le levels.

‘Honestly, because I am not really going out that much I haven’t felt this seismic shift,’ she says of getting noticed in the street.

‘It happens occasional­ly if I am going on a walk with a friend.

‘But it hasn’t felt like my world has expanded or contracted in any big way.

‘I spend most of my time where I have always lived, just at home with my parents.”

The experience has been ‘interestin­gly grounding’ because while her music may be reaching further and further she is still at home doing the chores.

“I have got to Hoover after this interview,” she laughs brightly.

‘It is genuinely very humbling. I don’t feel like a superstar.’

Collapsed In Sunbeams is steeped through with Parks’ own identity, she is bisexual and has Nigerian, Chadian and French heritage.

She is also a Londoner in the purest sense, inspired by the hustle and bustle of the city.

The album pivots between sweet-natured rumination­s on love and life, and darkly poetic pieces about depression and domestic strife.

Black Dog sees her contemplat­ing a friend’s depression. ‘It’s that sense of honesty and the fact I am just talking about somebody I know and love,’ she says after a pause.

‘There is no sense of judgment surroundin­g it.

‘I like to think that I approach it in a way that is empathetic and tender.’

Empathy is a theme that runs throughout Parks’ work and much has been made of her acute emotional sensitivit­ies.

‘I guess it is towing that line between trying to create some thread of hope while also being completely honest and unflinchin­g about how difficult things can be and just balancing those two things,’ she offers.

Lockdown has, understand­ably, been hard for Parks.

She was on the cusp of success when coronaviru­s hit.

But it has also offered her a chance to focus on being creative.

‘For me it has been about finding ways to inspire myself,’ she says.

‘That has been a lot of exploring film and exploring photograph­y and exploring production, sending letters and having a lot of phone calls and FaceTime moments.’ Yet as a writer who draws inspiratio­n from what they see and hear, has a lack of human contact had any negative impact?

‘It has definitely been difficult,’ she admits.

‘As a human being I also need to be around people quite often just to recharge. That’s just my personalit­y. So that has been quite difficult.

‘But on the flip side it has been interestin­g to be inspired by other things and just to find other avenues with which to write.’

Parks has therefore been gravitatin­g towards film, photograph­y and music that is ‘very human’.

She read I’ve Seen The Future And I’m Not Going by 80s’ New York visual artist Peter McGough, watched the 2019 French historical drama Portrait Of A Lady On Fire and engaged with the work of German photograph­er Wolfgang Tillmans.

Time spent wisely, you might think, before she finally heads out on tour to play her album live.

‘I definitely want it to be an experience,’ she tells me.

‘I know that sounds very vague but I want to find a way to incorporat­e the central themes of the album – the idea of sunlight and the idea of growth, and my love of flowers.

‘I want to incorporat­e that in some visual way.

‘What I did last time when I was reading poems half way through the set and giving them to the audience, just having that idea of creating a safe space with my concepts is something I really want to pursue.’

Created with Amazon Music as a part of its developing artist program Breakthrou­gh, Tonight With Arlo Parks is produced and presented by Up The Game, in associatio­n with Transgress­ive Records and is available now on Amazon Prime Video.

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 ?? Pictures by Paul Jacobs/pictureexc­lusive.com ?? Front page: James Alderson at Catheringt­on.
Pictures by Paul Jacobs/pictureexc­lusive.com Front page: James Alderson at Catheringt­on.
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