Bido Lito! Issue 52 / February 2015 | Page 5

Bido Lito! February 2015 Words: Christopher Torpey / @CATorp Photography: Becky Hawley and Dave Edwards (front cover) As that great triumverate De La Soul once said, three is the magic number. Admittedly it’s not spectacularly profound as an aphorism, but it’s particularly apt when applied to Liverpool’s favourite multinational combination, ALL WE ARE – a trio of musicians who are on the cusp of widespread and much deserved acclaim. The hive mind of Rich O’Flynn, Guro Gikling and Luis Santos (Percussion, Bass and Guitar respectively) is responsible for every aspect of the irresistible world of All We Are, which just got even more irresistible with the release of their debut, self-titled album. In the record’s eleven taut and sinewy tracks, Rich, Guro and Luis have created a microcosm of their infectious world, thus crafting a piece of work that will be utterly compelling to music fans with even the beigest of tastes. The first time our paths crossed with All We Are was in 2012, around the release of their very first EP. Back then they were a folk band who specialised in “creeping psychedelia”, at least, according to our definition. The All We Are that exists today is a massive progression from those embryonic moments, a refined and ultimately more confident entity. As evolved as All We Are version 2.0 is – and it unquestionably is, because you could never mistake them for a folk band now – an echo of the expansive, otherworldly atmosphere that has always been an All We Are trademark still cloaks their debut record, now fed through the “psychedelic boogie” FX pedal of the band’s new aesthetic. When discussing this evolution with Rich, Guro and Luis in a shadowy corner of their rehearsal room, they are clearly able to identify the point where it all changed for them. “I think we kind of see Utmost Good as a defining point, because it was when we ‘found our sound’, if you like. Most of the stuff we’d done up to then sort of fell by the wayside,” explains Rich as he warms himself in front of an electric fire. Utmost Good – their gloriously gloopy and catchy tune from midway through 2013 – is their line in the sand. All bar one of the songs on All We Are is made up of postUtmost Good material, and it’s something that Guro thinks is more representative of the band’s true essence. “I think we spent a lot of time before Utmost Good figuring out how to play together,” she says, “and to find the route we were going to take. It felt like when we hit on Utmost Good we’d found our sound. So from there we kind of knew what we were up to.” “I definitely think it shaped what we did from then on,” Rich adds in agreement. The track was a trigger for them in many ways, and opened the door to a label deal: since signing with Domino imprint Double Six at the beginning of 2014, the trio have been busy piecing together a record that holds true to their distinctive vibe. The album’s sensual movement kicks in straight from the off with Ebb/Flow. Built around a fat and cloudy bass riff, Ebb/Flow is a perfect introduction to the atmosphere the band feel defines them so precisely, complete with swirls and burps of space noises that twinkle underneath its killer groove. Elsewhere, the album’s three singles see them push all of the boundaries that their fluid genre-chopping allows. Feel Safe has a funky, lithe disco feel, while Keep Me Alive teases you along with its gorgeous melody and Guro and Rich’s cooing vocals. There has been some talk of a Bee Gees element in the All We Are sound, which feels a little lazy given their own description of their sound as “Bee Gees on Diazepam”. That said, it is hard to look past the double-header of Honey and I Wear You at the centre of the record as their unashamed Barry, Robin and Maurice moment, full of falsetto harmonies and nimble guitar work. “There are a fair amount of similarities between us and The Bee Gees,” Guro says half-jokingly, though the smile on her face suggests it may be even more playful than that. “They went through a lot of different periods before they found the sound that was them. I guess in some ways we are like siblings as well, even though we’re not brothers…!” As a sublime counterpoint to all this, the wistful Something 5 About You shows off their ability to build the layers up from seemingly nowhere, eventually blooming into a gorgeously dense whole. And then there’s Utmost Good, languorous and warm, which keeps a sort of link between the familiar and new worlds of All We Are. Though everything else on the album was recorded in their month-long stint at producer Dan Carey’s home studio in London, the original recording of Utmost Good, done with Joe Wills, remains, albeit with an updated mix. “We just wanted to give it a bit of freshness, and to bring it in line with the whole album,” Rich explains. “We really wanted that production to be on it, though; it’s quite special to us.” Given his past record in