Catalog Number: TPLP1892
Color: Black
Format: LP
UPC: 5016958106607
"Outstanding" - The Telegraph
"Complete, pure and personal" - MOJO
"Enchanting understated, intelligent folk pop" - Rolling Stone
'Wildfires', the sixth studio album from English singer-songwriter Polly Paulusma, is out on February 28th via One Little Independent Records and Wild Sound. Across nearly two hours and six sides of vinyl, folk instrumentation is peppered with spoken-word poetry
prologues amid sounds from caves and rivers. Its artful presentation is the hallmark of producer Ethan Johns (Ray Lamontagne / Laura Marling / Ryan Adams), as such, it presents a step change in Paulusma's until now largely autonomous catalogue.
Polly Paulusma bares all amidst a collection of textured acoustic guitars and rich, layered melodic flourishes. 'Wildfires' is mellow and cozy in its production, but its honesty is bittersweet - an intimate and reflective rumination on love's many guises, the
easy parts as well as the hard. As always, Paulusma's articulate and emotive lyrics, and her ability to convey the deepest vulnerability with vivid, sometimes nostalgic, imagery is astounding here. The LP, as filled with delicate earworms as it is with expressive
poetry, burns slowly but no less fiercely, and like love, it can be gentle, it can envelope one completely, and occasionally it can be heart-wrenching.
In an age of fatigue and dwindling attention spans, as well as targeted short-form content pushed over social media channels, Paulusma is asking us to slow down. 'Wildfires' is a callback, an ode to the concept album, intended to be listened to in a single,
relaxed sitting, allowing for the interconnected stories of love in all its forms to reveal themselves. Like all good things, the reward here is in the commitment.
The length of 'Wildfires' is a testament to the confidence that Johns had in the quality of its contents. Paulusma explains;
"It is a long body of work, far longer than I expected, coming in at 19 songs. I won't hear all this talk that we can't concentrate for more than 30 seconds. We sit down and binge on box sets for hours, compulsively. We can handle long form. I tried so hard
to edit the list of songs down to a more manageable size as I started working with producer Ethan Johns. But how to choose? I wanted Ethan to hear all the options so that he could pick the strongest candidates. And I had been writing. I wrote the vast majority
in a sweaty fury between October 2022 and May 2023, and they have the feel to me of objects forged in fire. I sent him 22 songs in a jumble, like a big bag of socks, unfolded, unsorted, I didn't know an order, but I did know this collection of songs was an
emotional map of some recent painful jostling, written in my own blood as Joni would have it. They really hurt to make, but it was a good hurt, like pulling out a splinter. Writing them may have saved my life, who knows.
I expected a song cull when I gave them all to Ethan. I thought he'd listen and trim it down to 10, 11, 12 songs. Normal album length. But he could hear my story in them, and he championed fervently the idea that we record them all. He ordered the songs
to create the journey which you will hear: I remember him reading the list to me over the phone and all the hairs on my arms stood up. To be seen by this huge empath blew my mind. He saw and understood the journey I had undertaken. These are songs I probably
could not have written 20 years ago. I just didn't have enough miles on the clock. And it took Ethan to see what I had."
They recorded 20 songs live in another burst of activity over five days between 18-22 November 2023 at a chapel studio in Wales, capturing performances between Polly, Jon Thorne (bass), Neil Cowley (piano) and Ethan on drums or tiple. Polly and Ethan then went
out for a day into the wild Preseli Hills and recorded the spoken word passages on location in churches, down quarries, in caves, by riversides, and against sacred standing stones. Ethan feathered the audio recordings to create delirious effects recalling
tape print-through. A few light overdubs were added to the songs on two sessions at his studio, and the album was complete.
Across parts 1 and 2 'Wildfires' (separated into 'Sparks' and 'Embers') tells a story. It describes the love we feel as children, the love we give to others through music, the misdirected love we feel as teenagers, the love of lost babies, the love of the dead,
and romantic love, the hot fools' gold, the agonising passion, the madness that comes from that entirely interior mental whirlwind, those feelings that burn on the inside, and the more durable slow-burn love of longer term relationships, the love and longing
for a divine presence, love from beyond the grave, love from beyond the stars.
These different forms of love are represented in standout tracks like 'Paper Cathedral', about the impossible nature of a fantasy relationship, 'Mary Louise', which is about the love for a girl gone too soon, 'Over and Over', how the recorded voice can continue
to love long after the singer has departed, 'What You Waiting For', depicting a love yet to arrive, and 'Tiny Little Things', which is about long-time love, one that Polly says is
"perhaps the most important". Each track is accompanied by its own individual narrative, tied together as the listener is guided through them. The album works as a deep listening experience, one best enjoyed in a continuum, like putting on a film.
Paulusma's live performance with bassist Jon Thorne (Lamb, Yorkston/Thorne/Khan, James Yorkston) will recreate this feel, with Jon's haunting and plaintive compositions accompanying spoken word sections as well as his kinetic playing on the songs. His creative
collaborative input was instrumental in the project developing as it did.
Polly Paulusma is also a producer and label founder - her own label Wild Sound released records from nine other artists between 2012-2016 before becoming a folk imprint at OLI. Her academic book 'Angela Carter and Folk Song: 'Invisible Music', prose, and the
art of canorography' was released by Bloomsbury Academic. She was appointed Professor of Song & Literature at ICMP (Institute of Contemporary Music Performance) where she teaches on their Songwriting masters. Paulusma has toured the world supporting Bob Dylan,
Jamie Cullum, The Divine Comedy and Marianne Faithfull, and played Glastonbury, T in the Park, V Festival and Cambridge Folk Festival among many others, touring the USA and Italy. She signed to Sony/ATV in LA and opened for Coldplay at their secret show at
The Troubadour in West Hollywood.
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