Kurran and the Wolfnotes – “Whatabitch”
October 30th, 2009 by mattPosted in Matt Williams, Music Industry News

“Whatabitch”
Chess Club 23rd November
www.myspace.com/kurranandthewolfnotes
Kurran and the Wolfnotes debut single ‘Whatabitch’ stands as the perfect introduction to the way that this band have brought an unmistakable noughties twist to the alt-folk sound, with an playful hint of The Strokes complimenting the otherwise straight up trad-sound. With New Yorker Kurran’s faltering, heartbroken croon and textbook Isle of White Festival circa-1968 guitar jangle it’s half medieval minstrel, half basement bar sleaze.
On the subject of the title they’re quick to stress that no one’s calling anyone a bitch, and that the term is used purely in the weary expressional sense, lest the feminists gather at the gates. Kurran explains, “It might not be the most romantic title but it’s about, from a guys perspective anyway, maybe getting the shorter end of a stick. There’s always got to be one person, and in this case it’s me.”
But anyway, they’re bored of talking about how they got together and they hate explaining what their songs are about, but our wolf based icebreakers (Prime example: wolves mate facing away from each other) prompt a more enthusiastic response. So on the cusp of the release of their debut single we invite them, currently recording in a spider infested garage in North London, to ponder what the future holds. Let’s get conceptual. What will the single they release in twenty years sound like compared to this one?
GARAGE SESSIONS
Whatabitch || Garage Sessions from Kurran and the Wolfnotes on Vimeo.
“Well it’ll be after the technological singularity, so you’ll just think of a song and you’ll hear it,” says Kurran, “But then it’s always the same, whenever technology goes too far people go back to the retro thing and we’ll be there shouting, ‘Here come the luddites!’ Just like now I guess, because after nu-rave and that, shall we say blip, fiddles are hot again, which is fine with us.”
Groans echo around the table at the emergence of the term “buzz band” but there’s a general consensus that maybe if they were doing this a few years ago people probably wouldn’t have been sitting up and paying attention. But with the re-emergence of a strong Brit-folk school the luddites become the cool kids, by doing what they do best.
While their sound may lend itself to comparison to a whole host of their contemporaries Kurran doesn’t see his band as a flash in the pan. He’s never more sincere than when he says, “I look and bands like Radiohead who have amazing discographies and I want to be able to look back in twenty years and say, ‘Yeah, every single one of these albums speaks for a part of my life’ where as now, with the hype thing people just churn out songs like… it’s fucking ridiculous. We want to spend a little bit more time on the songs we’ve got, but there’s always that pressure that once the song’s there it’s done, but we want to put the care in now when it’s important. We just want to make sure we’re proud of everything we’ve done and if that takes a little longer then that’s just how it’ll be. It’s all about the music! As original as that sounds.”
“The way I think about it,” says Kurran, “There are a few special people who get the chance to do this as their career and that’s it, that’s our goal, I want to be one of those people. It’s not about fame, it’s just to be able to play music for your whole life. It’s like when I was fifteen and heard NOFX and Rancid and I thought, ‘Woah, those guys are playing and it doesn’t look that hard, friggin sweet, I could probably do that.’ So I did!” With secret influences like that, who’s going to stop him?
Kurran and the Wolfnotes will be on the road with Ex-Lovers during October/November for a co-headline tour;
November
Sun 1st- Edinburgh, Electric Circus
Mon 2nd- Glasgow, King Tuts
Wed 4th- Nottingham, Bodega
Thurs 5th- Birmingham, Hare & Hounds
Fri 6th- Cambridge, Portland Arms
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Tags: 1968, Ex-Lovers, feminist, garage sessions, headline tour, isle of wight festival, kurran and the wolfnotes, new york, NOFX, Radiohead, rancid, the strokes, whatabitch





