October 2020

Video Premiere: "Get the Better" by Suzzy Roche & Lucy Wainwright Roche

VIDEO PREMIERE: Suzzy Roche & Lucy Wainwright Roche Harmonize Beautifully on Dramatic Pop Song “Get the Better”

Glide Magazine

This past spring, Suzzy Roche and her daughter Lucy Wainwright Roche headed down to Nashville to make their third album together. Suzzy had written a batch of songs, informed both by personal loss — her sister, Maggie, and her mother died in 2017 — and her sense of the societal havoc stemming from the 2016 election. Suzzy wrote these close-to-the-heart, close-to-the-bone songs with Lucy always in mind to sing them.

The two were just a week or so into their recording sessions with producer Jordan Brooke Hamlin (who had produced Lucy’s last two solo albums) when the COVID-19 pandemic struck. Suzzy and Lucy had to return quickly to their homes in Manhattan and Brooklyn, respectively, for the quarantine lockdown. It was a scary, bleak time but they didn’t abandon the album, even though Suzzy admits she felt like giving up many times — “like, why bother, the world is coming to an end.” However, she credits Lucy, Jordan, Helen Vaskevitch (assistant engineer), Stewart Lerman (who wound up mixing the record) and Dick Connette (StorySound Records) with keeping the project going. “Although this wasn’t the plan we originally made, and although it was trying at times,” Lucy shares, “we made it work and I actually think this is my favorite of our duo recordings.”

I Can Still Hear You, conceived out of personal loss and turmoil, arrives at a time of global loss and turmoil. The 11 thought-provoking tracks explore themes of good and evil, youth and mortality, the absurd and the serious, the real and the imagined, and the connection between what is present and what is gone. Each of their albums together have documented a specific time and this one, according to Suzzy, “probably is the darkest, but at the same time, it’s the most fanciful too. This time, there seemed an extra urgency about it.”

Today Glide is excited to premiere the video for “Get the Better,” one of two tracks on the album written during the pandemic, although it was started years earlier. The dreamy tune seems to swirl with ghosts, angels and thoughts about mortality, and it also represents the closest that Suzzy and Lucy have gotten to co-writing a song. Lucy began it 15 years ago and has been rewriting the tune, unsatisfyingly, since then. During the quarantine, she handed it off to her mom, who — as Lucy readily admits — “turned it into what it should be.” The song showcases their individual vocal strengths as well as their powerful harmonies, which both complement the potent dramatic pop that feels, perhaps appropriately, as if it could be a hit on 90s radio. The instrumentation is sparse yet moody, acting as a rich accent to the vocal interplay between the two singers and the emotionally stirring lyrics. All of this is complemented by the dark and mysterious animated video that feels like a painting come to life. 

Suzzy Roche describes the process behind the song:

“This is the first song that Lucy and I have collaborated on. It was left on the studio floor when Lucy and Jordan made Lucy’s last recording (Little Beast). We kept the words to the chorus and Lucy’s melody, and I wrote the lyrics. I love collaborating when writing a song, because it’s surprising what comes out. This song and ‘I Can Still Hear You’ were both written during the shutdown in NYC. And for me, they capture the mood of those scary days.”

WATCH THE VIDEO HERE

Folk Radio UK Premiere "Factory Girl" by Suzzy Roche & Lucy Wainwright Roche

Folk Radio UK

We recently shared the news on Folk Radio UK that Suzzy Roche & Lucy Wainwright Roche are to release a new album. I Can Still Hear You is out on 31 October and was recorded from their New York City homes during the quarantine.

Today, we have the pleasure of sharing from the album a traditional folk ballad “Factory Girl, one of two tracks from the album that deliver portraits of undervalued women as well as offering nods to The Roches’ past. Factory Girl appeared on The Roches’ 1980 record Nurds. The recording features the Indigo Girls (Amy Ray sings and Emily Saliers plays guitar). 

This song was one of my favorites to sing when I performed with my sisters (The Roches).  I think the song speaks for itself. It took on new meaning for me to sing it with Lucy and Amy Ray. The Indigo Girls, Amy and Emily, have had a huge influence on me, personally and artistically. Lucy, who met the Indigo Girls as a child, regularly sings with them these days, and that’s a beautiful thing.

Suzzy Roche

This album is rapidly becoming a personal favourite of the year, top class singing enveloped in a huge warmth of personality….it doesn’t get much better. 

I Can Still Hear You marks the third collaboration between Suzzy and Lucy, following 2013’s award-winning Fairytale and Myth and 2016’s acclaimed album, Mud & Apples.

I Can Still Hear You is out on 31 October 2020

Pre-order US: https://ffm.to/icanstillhearyou
Pre-order UK: http://smarturl.it/ICanStillHearYou

Photo Credit: Shervin Lainez

Song Premiere: "Jane" A Previously Unreleased Song Written by Maggie Roche from the Album 'I Can Still Hear You' by Suzzy Roche & Lucy Wainwright Roche

LISTEN: Suzzy Roche & Lucy Wainwright Roche, “Jane”

By BGS Staff
Home

Artist: Suzzy Roche & Lucy Wainwright Roche
Hometown: New York, New York
Song: “Jane”
Album: I Can Still Hear You
Release Date: October 30, 2020
Label: StorySound

In Their Words: “For my 16th birthday, my aunt Terre gave me a cassette tape of some demos that she and my aunt Maggie recorded in 1973. ‘Jane’ was one of the songs on the tape and it was immediately one of my favorites. The song had never been included on any album, and for many years I thought it would be a great song to record. It finally found a home on this album. I particularly like the line, ‘It’s like remembering rain in the sun, or remembering sun in the rain.’” — Lucy Wainwright Roche

LISTEN TO THE SONG HERE

AP News Review: 'I Can Still Hear You' by Suzzy Roche & Lucy Wainwright Roche

Review: A counterpoint to dissonance by mother-daughter duo

By STEVEN WINE
Colorado State University selects its first female president |  PostIndependent.com

Suzzy Roche and Lucy Wainwright Roche, “I Can Still Hear You” (StorySound)

Here’s what we need now: harmony.

On “I Can Still Hear You,” Suzzy Roche and her daughter, Lucy Wainwright Roche, beautifully blend their warm voices and create a delightful musical counterpoint to the dissonance of 2020.

Not that they ignore the challenges of these times. Most of the material was written by Suzzy, and she and Lucy sing movingly about ugliness, loneliness, longing and death. The crushed flowers of “Ruins” provide an apt metaphor for the toll this year has taken. There are also moments of whimsy in the 11 songs — and lots of small animals.

The pandemic interrupted work on the album shortly after sessions began, so Suzzy and Lucy retreated to their homes in New York City and recorded while in lockdown. Despite the circumstances, their vocals produce a familial glow. Lucy’s cheerful soprano rides above Suzzy’s knowing alto, and they also swap the melody and sing in unison, making it all sound as natural as breathing.

Producer and multi-instrumentalist Jordan Hamlin oversees discreet accompaniment, which ranges from electric guitar and keyboard to French horn and trumpet. Rhythm plays an important role, with mid-tempo pulses echoing the human heart as Suzzy and Lucy contemplate its mysteries.

“Love is a thing that does rule every nation,” goes one lyric. Let’s hear it for harmony.

Read the full article HERE