DIY, December 2018 / January 2019

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Fontaines DC Class of

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ontaines DC were relative unknowns when they exploded onto screens and airwaves in session for Seattle’s lauded KEXP back in May, making their mark in under 25 minutes. “Dublin in the rain is mine,” vocalist Grian Chatten bellowed over a furious but melodic wash of guitars on opening song ‘Big’, sounding like a downpour onto the city’s River Liffey itself. Inside one line of one song - a track touted to be the opening song of the band’s debut album - Grian announced himself as a vocalist and lyricist able to conjure biting, vivid imagery. “My childhood was small,” he reflected over dissonant stabs of open guitar strings, “but I’m gonna be big.” Whether referring to some kind of inner peace, or predicting a future for himself as a rock star, it wasn’t hard to believe him. It’s six months later, and the band are striding into London’s cavernous O2 to discuss the whirlwind that’s been 2018, and the debut they have up their sleeves. As they walk in, Grian notices that their city’s most famous

38 diymag.com

Dublin’s voice is rising this year, with a host of bands giving the Irish capital a new reputation for breathtaking, important guitar music. Meet the leaders of the pack. Words: Will Richards. Photos: Phil Smithies.

musical sons are playing two nights at the arena, starting tomorrow. Later on in the night, drinking at a Soho hotel that Bono, The Edge and co happen to be staying in ahead of their run, the quintet’s thick Dublin accents incite misguided delirium from a host of superfans waiting outside the lobby, convinced their half-cut heroes have just wandered past them. While all purely humorous coincidences, there’s a lot else that’s happened in the half year since that first KEXP session to suggest that Grian’s statement in ‘Big’ might just come true.

Now the entire album is consistently [sung in] that accent.” One listen to new single ‘Too Real’ and it’s clear what he means; while the band’s early singles saw the singer expressing a certain twang, the new track is fronted by booming, unafraid vocals that leave no question as to where they came from, sounding all the more powerful for it. Almost acknowledging this in the track’s chorus, he repeats: “Is it too real for ya?”

Before meeting us to chat and get their swing on for our photoshoot, the band had spent the day at the world-famous Abbey Road Studios, mastering the album. Well, they got there eventually, after initially pitching up at Abbey Road DLR station in a desolate, industrial part of East London, the opposite side of the city from the hallowed walls of the Beatles’ playground. “That shows you how far along we are as a band,” guitarist Conor Curley remarks, half smirking, half grimacing.

Meeting and forming while all studying at the Irish capital’s Liberties College, the five-piece - completed by guitarist Carlos O’Connell, bassist Conor Deegan and drummer Tom Coll - all bonded over their love of poetry, something that still ties the music of Fontaines DC together. A couple of years back, the band even released a poetry book called ‘Vroom’, a completely unedited stream of consciousness, backing human instinct and spontaneous feeling. It’s a philosophy that also flows through their music, and is - Grian tells us - “the spirit of the album”.

Signing the album - recorded with Dan Carey at his Streatham studio away just hours ago gives the band a chance to reflect on their first work, a full-length that looks set to cast their ambition in stone, a rock’n’roll album of brilliant scope, both literary and wonderfully to-the-point. “When we began this album, I think there were aspects of ourselves creatively that we were ignoring,” Grian reflects. “I felt like I was, anyway. When we wrote the first tune, I was excited by the idea of singing in a Dublin accent, but I wasn’t quite realising that fully.

“The reason that we were all drawn to one another was because of our appreciation of poetry,” the frontman affirms. “It’s what I felt stood out about the rest of the lads. I didn’t really know too much about poetry, I just liked the idea of being a whimsical, solitary figure who had loads of stuff on his mind but didn’t want to talk to anyone about it. I thought that was a cool, glamorous thing to be when I was a kid. When I met these lads and realised there was an actual depth and understanding of life to be got out of poetry, it made me


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