Interviews
Glass Animals Want To See a Koala
Making waves with music that fuses digital and organic sounds with soulful melodies and just a tiny bit of dubstep, Oxfordshire's elusive Glass Animals are on the up and up. Ahead of their debut...
Glass Animals, an Oxfordshire-based quartet with an ear for trip-hop and psychedelic indie pop have announced their debut trip to Australia with shows in Melbourne, Sydney and Brisbane.
Finding a strong connection between artwork and music, David Bayley (vocals) has crafted music that bounds playfully throughout their sparse, lofty soundscape. A little bit psychedelic, a little bit synthy, and a little bit modern edge. Glass Animals are the first signing to Wolf Tone, the new label started by producer Paul Epworth, who is best known for producing and co-writing Adele’s "Rolling in the Deep," in addition to working with artists like Bruno Mars, Foster The People and Florence & The Machine.
Glass Animals first single, eclectic synth-pop "Psylla" has reached Australian radios, with Triple J play and becoming popular additions to many a playlist.
Lovers of bands like Alt-J and Purity Ring will find themselves crazy over the eccentric yet inventive use of musical instruments that this band have perfected.
Tickets 0nsale Tuesday 11th February
"Glass Animals create a formula that leaves you curled in a corner marvelling at their brilliance" - Clash Music.
DATES
Wednesday, April 2, Ding Dong Lounge, Melbourne
Thursday, April 3, 0xford Art Factory, Sydney
Friday, April 4, The Hi Fi, Brisbane
https://www.facebook.com/glassanimalshttp://glass-animals.tumblr.com/
Making waves with music that fuses digital and organic sounds with soulful melodies and just a tiny bit of dubstep, Oxfordshire's elusive Glass Animals are on the up and up. Ahead of their debut...
Here at AAA, we listen to a whoooole lot of music and watch a whoooole lot of YouTube, and sometimes, we just need to share.
Despite their 2012 EP ‘Leaflings’, Glass Animals are a band that – on the release of slow-burner single ‘Psylla’ – seemingly appeared out of nowhere.