INTERVIEW:
Soul Island
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I have been speaking with Soul Island…
about his new single, Ocean, and how it came together. He talks about the upcoming album, Shards, and what sort of themes inspired it; when he got into music and what sort of sounds inspired him – he reveals a few albums that mean a lot to him.
Soul Island discusses his future plans and spending time in London; being raised in South Italy and whether there are any ambitions to fulfil before the end of the year – the songwriter ends the interview by selecting a cool track.
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Hi, Soul Island. How are you? How has your week been?
Hey! Quite deep…prepping the live set, some flying London to Lecce; with in between working on visuals for the upcoming record and singles.
For those new to your music; can you introduce yourself, please?
I’m Daniele and Soul Island is my first solo project. It’s an exciting phase as the first record is coming out, with experimentations on songwriting mixed to analog, Electronic soundscapes. In the past, I was part of quite a few other projects, from Power-Pop to Folk. However; this new work I always had in mind and turned out to be the most personal music I ever released.
Ocean is your new single. Can you explain the story and background of the song?
I was fascinated by the idea of composing a track with a lead synth arpeggio from start to finish. I worked a lot on the narrative in the chords sequence and then fed it through a Juno-106 with continuous live tweaking of all envelopes and filters. Lyrics are about the environment and my – everybody’s – sense of responsibility for it; the hopes we hold on to as events bigger than us unfold.
I was also definitely externalising the impact of London’s weather(!). After some time working on the track, I realised that water movement is effectively what I had in mind musically and that this was a recurring topic appearing (also) in the lyrics…so I picked ‘Ocean’ as the title.
It is from the upcoming album, Shards. What sort of stories and experiences compelled the music on there?
As I said; Shards is all very personal. Lyrics and soundscapes expose intimate imagery and feelings as fragments of my story and my inner-speech. However, I am always very empathic and context-aware so much of this focuses on friends, other people; or else subcultures, global issues. The songs in Shards are a selection over a long period; effectively a chunk of me and my ideas over time, most of which I was living in London, having moved there from Italy and travelled a lot to the rest of Europe and New York. There’s also a good amount of focus on change in independent music and the arts, fast content versus depth; substance vs. networking - the way with which I deal with these thoughts emotionally.
In terms of influences; which musicians did you grow up around?
Lecce in Puglia, South of Italy, is where I’ve grown up. There was a small local street and skate scene of which I was part. Music started playing a huge part into this scene and eventually quite a few bands were born and places for gigs, small D.I.Y. distros and labels. This was the environment; bands I would listen to were mostly Hardcore, Punk and Indie from the States…Hüsker Dü, Minor Threat; Fugazi, Sensefiled; Promise Ring, Texas Is the Reason…I could mention dozens.
Then, some Italian, Kina; Negazione, Nuvolablu; Shock Treatment, Eversor - we had brilliant Punk/Emo bands down in Lecce as well like Suburban Noise. And, of course, U.K. like The Clash, Exploited…eventually attention slowly shifted on the sound more than the politics and I became genre agnostic; I get passionate so long as the writing is good.
How did you get into music? Was there a particular moment when you knew it was what you needed to do?!
It came as a natural consequence of being in the skate culture in the '90s which eventually led to Punk/Hardcore. My parents’ home was also a place imbued with art ranging from paintings to good records played loud on Sundays. Making loud music felt as a protest against the culturally dry and small-minded region I lived in. Started on the guitar and immediately began writing songs, fronting a few bands with guitar and vocals (Room 104 among all). Since then; making music just felt a basic need.
You were raised in South Italy but are now in London. Was it a hard decision leaving Italy or has it opened up your musical world would you say?
Leaving Italy took some planning. Once in London and past the first few tough adaptation months, I started loving the city incredibly; it’s a constant adventure and discovery and, yes, it’s been a dive into countless shows in the many venues and pubs, both on stage and as public. I started buying vinyl again. I’ve also seen another completely different side of the city working as a software designer.
For me; the most challenging job to date. Full disclosure: I am now back in Italy, mostly, although I frequently fly back to U.K. having lived what has been a very intense life there - sorry London; the weather is so much better!
What do you hope to achieve by the end of 2018?
Record out, live set ready to go!
Have you got a favourite memory from your time in music so far – the one that sticks in the mind?
I have a terrible memory for events. However, recently, as the first single came out - announcing the record - and I was so touched by many (among friends, music people and totally unknown others) getting very emotional, almost as in-sync with the tracks’ footing. That’s been quite a thing to experience: a sense of intimate warmth and protection from the exposure of putting the track out in the first place.
Given your name; if you had to populate your own ‘Soul Island’; which singers would you have on there?!
Jon Bunch - always pictured as my older brother, fatherly figure. Bent Sæther, Jello Biafra. I love Thomas Mars’ attitude and writing. Elliott Smith, Nick Drake. Many more; depends if it’s a shipwreck or we’re at a holiday resort (smiles).
Which three albums mean the most to you would you say (and why)?
So difficult - there’s way more than three…
I’ll give you Blissard – Motorpsycho
It’s still there on any device I carry around. I have slept countless times with it in my headphones.
Then, more recently, Our Love - Caribou
It matches my sensibility; 100% would love to meet Dan Snaith and have a chat.
Finally…James Blake’s first (James Blake)
It’s a blue I always end up needing at some point or another.
What advice would you give to new artists coming through?
Ultimately, you want to hope making music is urgent to you or it will likely hurt you.
Do you have tour dates coming up? Where can we catch you play?
There are a few things lined up - but will put out details in due time!
Do you get much time to chill away from music? How do you unwind?
I do probably too many things. Besides music and designing software interfaces, I do often end up exploring computational art in many ways. I have an Instagram account where I post things at @morekid.
Finally, and for being a good sport; you can choose a song and I’ll play it here (not any of your music - I will do that).
I have this I just recently discovered; I’m loving it; amazing ambience
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Follow Soul Island
Official:
Twitter:
https://twitter.com/seesoulisland
Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/soulislandmusic/
Spotify:
https://open.spotify.com/artist/4PrcXP9tMwATIq6BukRP3p?si=IKwmFrVWQKygR7BdpDQ4yA
Instagram:
https://www.instagram.com/morekid/
SoundCloud: