29 September 2022 - 0 Comments
The Ōtepoti/Dunedin four-piece, Soaked Oats, waste no time following up with their second single Something from their upcoming album, Working Title to be released November 18th,
2022 on Australian indie tastemaker label Dot Dash.
Drummer, Conor Feehly, recalls the recording sessions "Something was definitely the fastest song to come together”. Lyricist Oscar Mein agrees, adding the lyrics were “downloaded” to him whilst going for a run in Haast.
The music video for the track has acclaimed director Martin Sagadin (Aldous Harding, Tiny Ruins, Marlon Williams)
giving their eye-catching and inventive interpretation of the song.
Something comes hot on the heels of chart-topping first single The Way It Works. A hit at the live showcases at Australia's Big Sound recently and sitting pretty on top of the official Alternative Airplay Charts in Aotearoa/New Zealand for multiple weeks, the SRN (Student Radio Network) Chart and hitting some of the biggest indie Spotify playlists; Front/Left, Coastal Drive and Indie Arrivals.
Soaked Oats percolated into existence in Dunedin, New Zealand in 2017. Catapulted by their fast-evolving song-writing chops, the band’s profile and fanbase are on the rise. The group have become known for endearing performances and live shows that have granted them access to tours and festival appearances throughout the UK, America and Australasia.
Having released a chapter of EP’s covering the important issues of Stoned Fruit (2017),
No Slip Ups (2017) and Sludge Pop (2019), the band were cooking with gas playing the bigger festivals including The Great Escape, Laneway, Rhythm & Vines, and WOMAD. Alongside a three-week
tour of the U.S. in 2019, the band have been welcomed so warmly across the ditch in Australia – they’ve toured there five times with two more tours in the works.
With their debut album, Working Title, Soaked Oats delve wider
into the worlds of their beloved songwriters, drawing influences from funk, psychedelia, electronica and hip hop to deliver their strongest piece of work yet.
Written and recorded over the last eighteen months, the New Zealand four-piece
group’s first full-length album explores the contrasting ways we perceive and interact with the world, how we define ourselves through work, and the subtle shift from viewing objects in the world as fixed ‘things’, to experiencing them as processes
and interactions unfolding.
Produced by Tom Healy (Tiny Ruins, Marlon Williams, The Chills), engineered by Tom Bell (David Kilgour and the Heavy Eights), and mastered by Christian Wright (Abbey Road Studios, Fontaines DC), the album delves into new sonic territory, with inspiration coming from 60’s psychedelia and dance-rock among others.
The majority of recording took place in a community hall in the remote
township of Okuru, Haast, situated on the West Coast of New Zealand’s South Island, where the coastal road ends at the foot of Mt. Aspiring National Park. Partly in response to that isolated landscape, Working Title has unfolded as a more introspective
offering from a band that are known typically for their cheerful sound.
Being a community hall in a small township, there was an open door policy, and visitors were frequent, including a local school group, a Hare Krishna who had boyhood
memories of the hall parties of yesteryear, and kind locals that would turn up with delicious freshly caught kaimoana (seafood). The visitors saw their beloved community hall transformed into a music studio with a blanket drum room and recording
gear encircling the band. The gear was transported via multiple van-loads across the island in a five-hour haul from the iconic recording studio, Chicks Hotel, in Port Chalmers, Otago.
Album release shows across Australasia and the U.S.
to be announced for 2023.
There are currently no comments for this article. Please log in to add new comments.