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Kawala’s Jim Higson and Daniel McCarthy are sat in a Hereford recording studio in front of rows of gold records, Number One trophies and Grammys. Theyâre not theirs â yet â but they do serve as a natural prompt for the duoâs effortlessly self-deprecating humour to come flying out of the gate. âIt looks like our careers have upped it a bit,â quips McCarthy as he gestures at the dazzling display.Â
Itâs early days for Kawala, who have been patiently honing their craft since forming during a brief stint at Leeds College Of Music in 2014. First as a duo with Higson on vocals and McCarthy on acoustic guitar and vocals, now as a full band completed by drummer Ben Batten, bassist Reeve Coulton and guitarist Dan Lee. While taking home a golden gramophone is probably some way off, theyâre still already hitting milestones they arguably have no right to be at just yet, Like playing the main stage at Reading & Leeds last summer or the events of one night last October, in the middle of their second ever headline tour.Â
Usually, it takes bands a few years of attention to become meaningful enough to someone to soundtrack the asking for their partnerâs hand in marriage. Yet thatâs exactly what happened on the bandâs first visit to Southampton. While Kawala were packing up their gear and taking the obligatory post-gig selfies with fans, they heard a massive scream go up in the adjoining pub. âThis random person was like, âYouâve gotta see thisâ, so we walked back there and this guy was like, âYeah, basically I just got engaged to my girlfriend,ââ McCarthy recalls.Â
âHe said he wasnât planning on proposing but then we started playing âAnimalsâ, which is his and his fiancĂ©eâs favourite song, and he didnât have a choice,â adds Higson. âWhich is great for us because if she said no he would forever know âAnimalsâ as the song he lost the love of his life to. But instead, itâs quite the opposite.âÂ
At the time, âAnimalsâ hadnât even been released â just a few fan-shot videos from previous gigs on YouTube to go on â which tells you something about the power of a Kawala song. That impact comes from something very pure but also very necessary in todayâs world. Even when theyâre singing about something less than cheery, like the toxic relationship at the centre of âAnimalsâ, theyâre still able to find an element of hope and encouragement amidst the gloom. âHold onto your worth or youâll be broken,â they advise on that track, over lush finger-picked acoustic melodies. On last yearâs Maccabees-meets-Alt-J swirl of âWash Away The Wildâ, they reassure a friend battling a drinking problem: âAnd I wonât let you fall away, youâll see/You will wash away the wild.â Crucially, you may not be the friends they sing of and might never have met Kawala, but the atmosphere in their songs â particularly on their recent self-titled EP â makes you feel otherwise.Â
âItâs fairly unintentional,â Higson reasons of the fact their songs give you something to cling onto. âI donât know if itâs an innate feeling that we have in ourselves⊠I think itâs easier to be sad than it is to be happy so if we can make music and have a nice time and make happy songs, itâs worth putting in the effort to do that.âÂ
âItâs our Lizzo moment,â McCarthy chimes in of âAnimalsâ specifically, quickly throwing in an apologetic mumble to the current figurehead of pop empowerment. âThatâs so offensive to Lizzo â sheâs gonna be like, âWho and what is thisâ.âÂ
Currently, the group are holed up in the studio working on some new music with producer â and owner of that array of awards â Will Hicks (Lily Allen, Ed Sheeran). âIt sounds like a record,â McCarthy says excitedly. âIâm more proud of them than anything weâve done before.â He cites old Kings Of Leon (âPre-âSex On Fireâ,â he notes, making an important distinction), parts of the new Bombay Bicycle Club album, and rediscoveries like Captain Beefheart as current inspirations, while Higson opts for Ben Howard and Michael Kiwanuka, and the eclecticism in Kawalaâs music suddenly isnât so surprising.Â
While they say thereâs no plans in place for this new batch of songs (âWeâre just making songs for the sake of making songs at the moment,â shrugs Higson), Kawala do have plenty of plans for the rest of 2019. In just a few weeks, theyâll achieve a lifelong dream of supporting Bombay Bicycle Club on tour as they open for them in Europe. âI might have deafened the person next to me,â Higson laughs of the moment they found out. âIt means everything to me and it means a lot for us creatively cos they must like our music enough to have us on tour with them. Itâs flattering to be asked.âÂ
âThereâs no artist on earth weâd rather support,â McCarthy agrees. âCos they broke up for a while, it seemed like it was out of the picture. When we kicked off Kawala, we talked about how much we love Bombay and wanted to support them on tour. We talked about how much we love the [acoustic YouTube channel] Mahogany sessions and we got signed by Mahogany [when they launched a label]. The only dream left is to play Jools Holland.âÂ
Over the next few months, Kawala will keep themselves busy with their biggest headline tour to date and a summer of festivals, including Latitude and Live At Leeds. The former run will conclude with what should be a triumphant return to their Camden stomping ground at the iconic Electric Ballroom. Even if they say theyâre equal parts excited and terrified to play there, there is one benefit of venues getting bigger â being able to avoid the thinly-veiled threats from your parentsâ mates. âIâll never forget a couple of years ago when a friend of my mumâs came to our headline show at Omeara,â McCarthy remembers fondly. âShe lent into me at the end of the gig and was like, âLovely gig â but if you ever make me go south of the river againâŠââÂ
âJust as well we can have a whole career without leaving Camden,â Higson retorts, listing off venues most bands would kill to play as if theyâre as easy to book as the local pub. Sooner or later, though, their family friends are just going to have to get used to going the extra mile.
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