Much like a cartoon villain, Cavetown â the indie-pop project of Robin Skinner â is plotting taking over the world from his bedroom. But fear not! For Cavetown is a force of good! His music lives in the same emotional world as Rex Orange Country or Twenty One Pilots and heâs helped build the DIYouTube scene that includes Chloe Moriondo, mxmtoon, Conan Gray, and Tessa Violet.
Heâs been carefully building his colourful, inclusive world for a while now. Starting out with covers of Panic! At The Disco, Elliot Smith and The Libertines, Skinner eventually moved onto releasing his own self-produced music. With his 2018 album âLemon boyâ, Cavetown took the show on the road and heâs been touring relentlessly at home in the UK and in the States â his US Passport helping him break America before the rest of the world caught on.
He was invited by The 1975‘s Matty Healy to perform at their now-cancelled Finsbury Park show and signed to Warner Musicâs Sire Records for 2020âs âSleepy Headâ album. Oh, heâs also produced mxmtoon’s ‘The Masquerade’ as well as sharing a new song âSmoke Circlesâ, with Tessa Violet. Turns out a heroâs work is never done. We Zoomed the boy to see whatâs left for his not-so-diabolical masterplan.
Your major label debut âSleepyheadâ has been out for a few months now, how are you feeling about?
I already donât like it. You eventually get sick of it when you write your own stuff but I havenât even toured it. I’m just tired of it already. The process of self-producing that album was stressful for me, so I associate all those songs with that stressful time. Thatâs good though, itâs motivation to write new stuff.
Did signing to a major label add to the pressure?
I tried to look at it like it was just another album where Iâve got to try my best again. But my best has to be better than the previous thing. âSleepyheadâ felt bigger than anything Iâd done before because I had to live up to âLemon boyâ after that had done so well. The label, my manager, they were all super supportive but I just expected so much of myself. At the same time, Iâd been touring for two years solid, which Iâve now realised, isnât the best thing to do.
Youâd had success as an independent musician, so why sign to a major?
Itâs exciting to have endless possibilities now. It was the next step really because we’d done as much as we could do by ourselves. I remember the stress of writing âLemon Boyâ was that it was just me and I had to do so much. Being able to offload aspects of the work onto people around me feels so much more empowering. Iâm left to just do what I do best, which is, make the music. I definitely feel in control of the world Iâm creating, which is ideal.
Your songs are being streamed by millions and youâre now playing massive shows. How have you found coping with that?
I donât tend to look at the numbers. I avoid things that will make me feel a bit weird. Iâm still getting used to playing live though because thatâs where it becomes a real thing, rather than just numbers on a screen. It makes you realise whatâs actually going on which can be overwhelming. I donât tend to be a very social person and I like being alone so it’s taking a lot of getting used to being the centre of attention onstage. The gradual increase is the way to make it feel normal. If you throw a frog in hot water it will jump out ,but if you put a frog in cold water and slowly heat it up, then it will stay there until it dies. Thatâs me. Iâm the frog in the water.
Why play live at all then?
It never felt like a place I would be because Iâve always been so introverted, but being on stage is something that excites me. Itâs an interesting experience to feel the confidence that that brings you. Feeling celebrated for a bit is a nice feeling. Also, there are a lot of kids who feel a bit lost, like they’re not understood or theyâre not welcome in certain places. I want them to be able to come to a show and feel like they’re supposed to be there and are part of a little family.
What do you want Cavetown to mean to people?
I want people to see it as an escape from anything they’re worried about, a place people can go to if they want to enjoy some nice vibes and I want it to be a community of kind, open-minded, understanding friends, which is out of my hands really. Itâs the people that like the music that create that environment and they’ve done a stellar job.
You talk openly about things like sexuality or mental health without making it into a grand statement. Do you think that approach is important?
I admire people who really talk in-depth or advocate for things they believe in but I want to be able to show people that it’s ok to just be yourself. You’re allowed to just have a mental illness or be a certain identity, there doesnât have to be anything further than that. You can just be. Iâm just being and the fact people can see that and feel welcomed by it is really cool.
You worked with mxmtoon on her recent album, âThe Masqueradeâ. Was that good fun?
We were in New York together last summer and we produced her album over ten days, which Iâm feeling pretty chuffed about. It went really smooth âcos we got along so well and we were both on the same wavelength. Iâm an artist who is very confident in my own sound, so Iâm able to help artists who might not know quite what they want yet. But I would also put an emphasis on the fact itâs her song and the important thing is for her to feel connected to everything about it. With Maia, we really have the same ideas in mind and itâs a really good mesh of brains. I love producing though, itâs my favourite part of it all and itâs something I definitely want to do more of.
Do you know what comes next?
I want the next album to be super mellow. Iâm writing a bunch of very emo and gentle songs that have a real nice vibe but I donât have a plan for where my music is going in general. I donât feel restricted to a certain genre, I just tend to mix and match things. I donât know what Iâll be into in a year or so, maybe Iâll be doing heavy metal. Hopefully thereâll be some stuff soon though. I do have some songs Iâve written with some friends that I might be doing something with soon. The last album was a structured release but for whatever comes next, it’ll be very casual which Iâm looking forward to.
And will you always work from your bedroom?
Yeah, I love it. I tried working with a couple of producers in the past and it was just boring. I really love my own space, I love having the freedom to do what I want and I don’t think Iâd want to change that anytime soon.
Cavetown’s new single ‘Smoke Signals’ is out now
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