PIP BLOM
Announce Debut Album Boat
Out May 31 on Heavenly / PIAS
U.S. Debut at SXSW 2019
Photo credit: Raymond van Mil
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"Pip Blom is a 22-year-old Amsterdammer with a perfect post-punk name and a Cobain-ish gift for saying a lot with a little... A band with a sense of purpose." - Rolling Stone
"A slouchy, forever-young attitude punctuated by heavy guitar and driving drums." -NPR
"Flickering intensity." - Stereogum
"Powered by some off-kilter guitar leads... Pip's instantly likable voice wins you over." -Brooklyn Vegan
Amsterdam singer-guitarist Pip Blom and her powerhouse indie-rock quartet of the same name made a splash in 2018, opening shows for the likes of The Breeders, Garbage, and Franz Ferdinand and earning rave reviews for their debut U.S. release, the Paycheck EP. Pip Blom is kicking off 2019 in a big way, announcing their debut album Boat, out May 31 on Heavenly Recordings/[PIAS]. Today the band also shares the album's magnetizing lead single "Daddy Issues," an anthemic track bolstered by razor-sharp guitars and Blom's charmingly youthful vocals.
Boat is out May 31 and is available for pre-order NOW. Pip Blom will be making their live U.S. debut at this year's SXSW. Watch this space for more details.
Pip Blom - Boat
May 31, 2019 - Heavenly/[PIAS]
1. Daddy Issues
2. Don't Make It Difficult
3. Say It
4. Tired
5. Bedhead
6. Tinfoil
7. Ruby
8. Set Of Stairs
9. Sorry
10. Aha
MORE ON BOAT:
Signing to Heavenly Recordings was the fulfillment of one of the things Pip Blom dreamed of since first picking up a guitar and the culmination of a storming 2018 that propelled Pip Blom as one of the year's most exciting rising guitar bands.
Growing up intensely shy, it was an uncharacteristic plunge into the limelight during her teens that first kicked off Pip Blom's musical passage: in the form of answering an advertisement for a songwriting competition.
Pip earnestly set about writing songs on a Loog guitar, a two-stringed children's line of the instrument that aids learning, cultivating a 20-minute set and performing for the first time in front of an audience - eventually reaching the semi-finals of said competition. As you have gathered, the story didn't end there and failing to win was anything but a deterrent.
Neither was struggling to find band members post-competition. Pip simply ploughed on as she always has, finding a way to make things work with the resources around her. Programming drums on a computer and writing and recording both bass and guitar parts, Pip decided to start self-releasing songs on the internet and it didn't take long for people to start taking notice.
Today, that same plucky, head-on attitude characterises everything she does and it's an absolute joy to behold - whether that's witnessing her band's powerfully impressive live show or listening to her honest, heart-on-sleeve approach to writing songs on record.
And Boat is emblematic of that - an open book of Pip Blom, delivered via her undeniable knack for writing a hook-laden, 3-4 minute song; planting it in your head and making it stay there looping days after first hearing it.
There's the kinetic combination of guitars from herself and brother Tender Blom, the effortlessly captivating vocal range which can be authoritative and intent like in the driving album opener "Daddy Issues," or soothing and warm as heard in melodic middle track "Bedhead." Then there are the choruses that seem to stop songs in their tracks and lift them into a different stratosphere.
The album's earworm quality is something that has been connecting across the waters from her home country of the Netherlands, aside from the aforementioned 6 Music playlists, landing an impressive amount of spins across US college radio and a spot on the coveted Triple J playlist in Australia.
Listening through, it's not hard to understand why. The album is wrapped up in a certain energy that, while evident the band put everything into recording it, would indicate they had a blast doing so - its infectious and, most importantly, wholeheartedly believable.
Dave McCracken bottled up that energy while overseeing the recording at Big Jelly studios in Margate, with the album then mixed by Dillip Harris in a shipping container on the banks of the Thames in East London. Its result is ten songs that, alluding to the album's title, ferry you through Pip's headspace via expertly crafted songs gelled together through their unassuming depth.
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