Jamie Woon's debut album ‘mirrorwriting’ has been three years in the making… and a lifetime in the writing. These are twelve pitch-perfect gems that combine forward-thinking production with beautifully crafted songs; a sonic support-system that frames and holds Woon's luminous voice in all the right places. It's intimate without being obvious, emotional without being syrupy and honest without being confessional, where the basic touchstones of human emotion get a fresh and soulful airing.
This, he says, is a calming record, made for himself and for other people. He's crafted a raft of dreamy, unsettled melancholy, pieces of music which try to shake off anxiety by finding a groove and songs that aim to evoke inscrutable things. Oh, and Woon claims there are at least four songs about going for a walk.
Jamie Woon has had a remarkable few months. Back in October he released Night Air, as dark, sweet and seductive as molasses, an irresistibly understated combination of Jamie’s uniquely supple voice, his subtly compulsive beats and a sky full of atmosphere. It was written with some additional production from Burial, and came with a remix from superlatively-talented producer Ramadanman (who sealed their friendship by naming one of his 2007 releases 'The Woon'). The next month he was featured in The Guardian's New Band Of The Day, and four weeks later found himself playlisted at Radio 1 and hovering at the top end of the BBC's Sounds of 2011 poll come the start of the year. He's since enjoyed a sell-out tour and announced a second for early summer including London’s Sherpherds Bush Empire. Things are changing rapidly for the 28 year old Londoner.
It's been a long journey to get to this point, or more accurately two journeys: life up to the release of his first 12" Wayfaring Stranger and life between then and now. The former has been widely disseminated: he grew up in the South London suburbs with his mother, folk singer Mae McKenna, who'd take him along while she was recording backing vocals for Kylie Minogue, and would let him try out her small studio in their house, where he spent hours multi-tracking his voice in the same way she would for her job as a backing vocalist. His uncles Hugh and Ted were also members of the sensational Alex Harvey Band. Woon gained a place at the BRIT school the year before Amy Winehouse and co-founded an acoustic night called OneTaste, racking up hundreds of hours of gigs at their monthly events, and as they began taking the sessions out to festivals in the mid-late 2000s
.
The second part of the journey began when Wayfaring Stranger came out in 2007. That record, now rated of one of the best 12"s of the last decade thanks to the Burial mix, came out on Live Recordings, an innovative project in Lewisham run by social enterprise Livity, where a group of young men from local estates ran their own label for a year. Woon was heavily into Burial's first album and acting on a passing comment from a mutual friend that the anonymous producer liked male vocals, contacted his record label.
‘mirrorwriting’ took three years of work and reworking. Woon was sharing a house with fellow musicians Portico Quartet in Clapton, East London working on his MacBook and doing endless takes of each song, recording vocals at The Way studio in Hackney, and 2 months in a cottage in Trevone, Cornwall, where he recorded clicks and taps on the wicker furniture, and recorded the sounds of stones from the nearby stream to turn into snare drums. He admits to doing hundreds of takes in order to get exactly the right combination of mystery and technical polish. By the end he was down to 'only' six or seven takes. He might be a perfectionist, but he's also unpredictable: the night before mastering the record he reprised an old song, Blue Truth, which he released as a free download 2 days later.
‘mirrorwriting’ was produced with precision by Jamie himself, with additional production from Will Bevan. As a debut it’s a complete body of work that's ripe for that transition from niche to mainstream. It's a deeply personal record that draws from R'nB, folk, '80s and '90s soul and pop, UK bass culture and the blues. It digs into emotions we all feel and sends them spinning, just-recognisable, back to us.
"It’s personal, almost therapeutic. I'm quite a private person and I don’t set out to talk about my business in public but when songs are done you can't get around it. They are like a code, and all you need is a mirror to read it."
Jamie Woon on ‘mirrorwriting’
Tracklisting:
1) Night Air
2) Street
3) Lady Luck
4) Shoulda
5) Middle
6) Spirits
7) Echoes
8) Spiral
9) TMRW
10) Secondbreath
11) Gravity
12) Waterfront
Night Air
"I spent two and a half years, on and off, finishing this song. I'd do a session every week on it and I recorded it in five different spaces."
Street
"It's about a beautiful day in the city, when it just seems so huge with endless possibility and it's almost too much. There's so much you can do it's almost a bit sad.”
Lady Luck
"I think this is the folkiest of the bunch. It's about fortune… but really it's about whinging and checking yourself and self-determination. No-one can run your life for you. No-one's going to pick you up and save you. It's a blues feel, and I like the idea of setting a whinge to the blues, because in the scheme of things, I don’t really have much to whinge about but I still give it a good crack every now and again."
Shoulda
"It's a song about two people wanting to repair a relationship but being in a standstill, about forgiveness and the difficulty of it, and how regret and guilt get muddled up together. The couplet in the chorus is by Polarbear, a brilliant writer from Birmingham."
Middle
"Middle is my favourite vocal because I'd found my edges, what I could do, what I couldn't do, accepting my own voice. I was just really tired of doing a hundred takes a track by then. It started out as a 140bpm disco record, like a sped-up Prince groove. It’s about the idea of balance and walking a middle line, feeling centred and at peace - like the yin yang symbol – it’s the funkiest, most difficult thing I can think of."
Spirits
"It's a song written by my friend Yap, a very inspiring philosopher poet from Ireland. He was in the rock band, One Minute Silence. I met him playing at cabaret squat parties in Hackey Wick. He writes brutal anarchist poetry and also these beautiful folk songs. I asked him if he'd write me some lyrics and he said he'd love to hear me do his favourite song. I did an arrangement with a loop sampler and put it on youtube, the album version is the fully produced version."
Echoes
"It was the first track finished and it's the shortest song on the album. The lyrics are by Polarbear. It's a hustle living in London as a performing artist, musician or a poet, and I think what he's getting at that with this. And the fact you have to get yourself out there with your art, which might have been made in a private place. It's something I really related to: the nature of the hustle and realising who and what is important and what is not."
Spiral
"What can I say? It's about a specific moment, the moment where two people know they're going to break up."
TMRW
"There's a song about regret so there had to be a song about tomorrow to balance things out. I believe that humans will survive in one form or another. It might seem like the sky is falling down, but that's always been the case and it probably always will be but it's still a miracle that we get through everyday."
Gravity
"This song has been around for ages. It was the first song I wrote that said what I needed to say. It's a love song. It's self-explanatory."
Waterfront
"It's one of those going out for a walk songs. It's a tip of the hat to old soul records, with an upfront vocal and a distant broken organ, and drums that I recorded in the gravel by the sea. It's a story about going out for a walk and finding a groove. The end of the record where the angst is allowed to fall away."
|