The Sunday Post (Inverness)

Amelia Warner

- WORDS MURRAY SCOUGALL

How was lockdown for you?

We were in New York when it first started and that was quite stressful, not knowing whether to stay or go, and if work was going to be cancelled But once it was resolved we came home, just before everything shut down. I’m wary of saying it’s been lovely, because I know for a lot of people it’s been a really difficult and challengin­g time, but we’re really lucky that we live in the countrysid­e, have space and enjoyed nice weather.

In what way has life been different?

Often we have to spend chunks of time away from home, or Jamie will be away shooting somewhere, so it’s rare we’re all in the one place and usually it’s a bit complicate­d, even just going back and forward to London, but that’s all gone. It’s been nice.

Why did you record your new EP, Haven, at your house last year?

I was in a different form of quarantine, I guess, the quarantine of having just had a baby, when you’re in this funny existence of not being quite in the world, you’re inhabiting your own world. Also, we’d just moved house a week before we had her. It was a really special time and I felt this overwhelmi­ng sense of being in the right place and being home. Also, I’d been really ill when I was pregnant, which was weird because this was our third baby and I hadn’t had any of that with the first two. It really floored me. When you’re pregnant, you just want to be home and settled, so moving house right at the end of the pregnancy wasn’t great timing. I had this huge sense of wanting to be here and ready for her. She was very considerat­e in her timing, waiting until her due date, and I had her here.

Amelia’s new EP, Haven, is available now from Decca Records

How does writing your solo material differ from writing for movie soundtrack­s?

I still tend to construct a narrative for my solo projects. It’s nice to have the freedom and play with ideas, but I also enjoy the limits and boundaries, and working within them, that comes with film. How will the art scene look post-lockdown?

I think theatre and live music is in trouble and I don’t know how long they can survive without money or without the public going out to support them. It’s definitely a worry. One of the things to come out of lockdown is our appreciati­on for the shared experience. You can stream a show or music, but I think we’ve realised that congregati­ng and coming together for these experience­s is irreplacea­ble. We need it as humans – nothing beats the human connection. I hope these venues hang on.

Being so ill when I was pregnant really floored me

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