
Big Wows: Limited Edition Splatter Vinyl LP
"Big Wows' is heavier, harder and weirder than Stealing Sheepâs previous work. Bold neon pop songs with rave percussion, steelpans, dreamy segues and breathy experiments. The *fsszzt* sound of lemonade opens the album with a hyper-real sense of optimism that progressively reveals the cracks of dystopian irony amidst sugarâcoated pop; held together by Emily Lansleyâs bass guitar, Luciana Mercerâs drum kit, Rebecca Hawleyâs synths, and the trioâs swooning steely vocal harmonies.
+ First run of the LP comes pressed on coloured splatter vinyl and housed in a mirrorboard sleeve.
Stealing Sheep describe Big Wows as âa slow rushâ; taking shape over a period of nearly three years spent working out exactly what they wanted it to be and creating an album that levitated their identities as individuals as well as merging them into one unit âWeâre each finding our own creative intuition,â says Bex â..and then we come together...and we back each other up"" adds Lucy.
Just as the title suggests, Big Wows is both cynical and optimistic: dreaminess and pop dance rhythms are cut With eye rolling vocal styles inflected by heartfelt lyrical messages âWe hit upon this conversational-style between the vocals and have alternating lead melodies. There's a sarcastic tone to some of the music but there is always a strong wilfulness to incorporate honest integrity, which is hard to do but refreshing when it finally comes out.â
Side one opens with a burst of shimmery synths as âShow Loveâ and âBack in Timeâ lead you heart first into the headier feels of âJokin' Meâ and upbeat bounce of 'Why haven't I?' following into the more progressive grooves for âGirlâ then fading out with the narcoleptic comforts of âJust Dreamingâ.
Side two digs deeper into a dreamworld, with the manias and hallucinations of âBreatheâ and âTrue Coloursâ as well as the gorgeous disillusionment of the title track and ending with an unexpected tropical club banger âChoose Like Youâ.
Running through the whole record is a response to living in a tech era: âWe wanted sounds to represent TVs, computers and everyday glitchesâ says Bex âWe started to have this feeling that life is like a game and how you can malfunction when you're blasted with too much informationâŠâ
As well as composing with traditional instrumentation they also started songs solely on the computer; sequencing, building sounds, drum machines and responding to that non-emotional binary world. âThe big challenge,â continues Bex âis making machines sound organic, emotional, finding their flaws. Thatâs why Delia Derbyshire is so important to us. All the effects that she uses serve to humanise the machines.â
Since the release of their last album, 2015âs surreal and fantastical âNot Realâ, theyâve been in demand as multidisciplinary public artists as well as musicians â on projects including Wow Machine, which brings to life another more conceptual strand of âBig Wowsâ; in a mechanical light up stage with dancers and live music.
In summer 2018 they also performed at UK festivals with a 15 strong all-female procession to celebrate the centenary of Suffrage. âBeing female has become more of a theme in our workâ the band say. âIt's obviously always been there but now we're playing with it more conceptually and thinking about empowerment"
This greater confidence and rock-solid aesthetic mean that Stealing Sheep can take greater risks and reap more wonderful rewards. They have a broad range of influences â St Vincent, Michael Jackson, The Knife, Kraftwerk, Drake, Little Dragon - but they remain so resolutely and richly themselves. âWe try new things out and we get more confident about what we like.â says Bex. ""Thereâs a really good thing Grayson Perry says about developing your creative intuition. You get to a level as an artist where you know on a gut level what you like and what you donât like. It takes a long time to feel comfortable in that place, to know your palette, to know you like these drum sounds or whatever it is.â
Lucy is working with a full drum kit now instead of just toms, Emily is playing bass guitar, Bex is making her own synth patches and theyâre all using new equipment: they are developing and experimenting and moving forward together. âWe wanted the machine sounds to be juxtaposed against a full kit and bass guitar, which we tracked live to feel intentionally loose in places. We like the idea of placing robotic tech next to real life energy.â
The songs began at home or in their studio at Liverpoolâs Invisible Wind Factory, laying down the main body of the tracks, then the band worked with various producers â including Marta Salogni (Bjork, MIA, Factory Floor), Andy Smith (Years & Years), Ash Workman (Christine & The Queens, Metronomy) and Joe Wills (video artist for Little Dragon) â as theyâve tried out different mixes and ideas to convey their messages.
They also teamed up with 8bit video artist Pastle Castle (Emily Garner) from Leeds, who created a Karaoke video series for the whole album; exploring Stealing Sheep's digital dimension and their shifting identities amidst changing cultural moods and millennial paraphernalia. ""It's a crazy time and it's challenging navigating through it, but it's like 'whatever' bring on the BIG WOWS.â
"Big Wows' is heavier, harder and weirder than Stealing Sheepâs previous work. Bold neon pop songs with rave percussion, steelpans, dreamy segues and breathy experiments. The *fsszzt* sound of lemonade opens the album with a hyper-real sense of optimism that progressively reveals the cracks of dystopian irony amidst sugarâcoated pop; held together by Emily Lansleyâs bass guitar, Luciana Mercerâs drum kit, Rebecca Hawleyâs synths, and the trioâs swooning steely vocal harmonies.
+ First run of the LP comes pressed on coloured splatter vinyl and housed in a mirrorboard sleeve.
Stealing Sheep describe Big Wows as âa slow rushâ; taking shape over a period of nearly three years spent working out exactly what they wanted it to be and creating an album that levitated their identities as individuals as well as merging them into one unit âWeâre each finding our own creative intuition,â says Bex â..and then we come together...and we back each other up"" adds Lucy.
Just as the title suggests, Big Wows is both cynical and optimistic: dreaminess and pop dance rhythms are cut With eye rolling vocal styles inflected by heartfelt lyrical messages âWe hit upon this conversational-style between the vocals and have alternating lead melodies. There's a sarcastic tone to some of the music but there is always a strong wilfulness to incorporate honest integrity, which is hard to do but refreshing when it finally comes out.â
Side one opens with a burst of shimmery synths as âShow Loveâ and âBack in Timeâ lead you heart first into the headier feels of âJokin' Meâ and upbeat bounce of 'Why haven't I?' following into the more progressive grooves for âGirlâ then fading out with the narcoleptic comforts of âJust Dreamingâ.
Side two digs deeper into a dreamworld, with the manias and hallucinations of âBreatheâ and âTrue Coloursâ as well as the gorgeous disillusionment of the title track and ending with an unexpected tropical club banger âChoose Like Youâ.
Running through the whole record is a response to living in a tech era: âWe wanted sounds to represent TVs, computers and everyday glitchesâ says Bex âWe started to have this feeling that life is like a game and how you can malfunction when you're blasted with too much informationâŠâ
As well as composing with traditional instrumentation they also started songs solely on the computer; sequencing, building sounds, drum machines and responding to that non-emotional binary world. âThe big challenge,â continues Bex âis making machines sound organic, emotional, finding their flaws. Thatâs why Delia Derbyshire is so important to us. All the effects that she uses serve to humanise the machines.â
Since the release of their last album, 2015âs surreal and fantastical âNot Realâ, theyâve been in demand as multidisciplinary public artists as well as musicians â on projects including Wow Machine, which brings to life another more conceptual strand of âBig Wowsâ; in a mechanical light up stage with dancers and live music.
In summer 2018 they also performed at UK festivals with a 15 strong all-female procession to celebrate the centenary of Suffrage. âBeing female has become more of a theme in our workâ the band say. âIt's obviously always been there but now we're playing with it more conceptually and thinking about empowerment"
This greater confidence and rock-solid aesthetic mean that Stealing Sheep can take greater risks and reap more wonderful rewards. They have a broad range of influences â St Vincent, Michael Jackson, The Knife, Kraftwerk, Drake, Little Dragon - but they remain so resolutely and richly themselves. âWe try new things out and we get more confident about what we like.â says Bex. ""Thereâs a really good thing Grayson Perry says about developing your creative intuition. You get to a level as an artist where you know on a gut level what you like and what you donât like. It takes a long time to feel comfortable in that place, to know your palette, to know you like these drum sounds or whatever it is.â
Lucy is working with a full drum kit now instead of just toms, Emily is playing bass guitar, Bex is making her own synth patches and theyâre all using new equipment: they are developing and experimenting and moving forward together. âWe wanted the machine sounds to be juxtaposed against a full kit and bass guitar, which we tracked live to feel intentionally loose in places. We like the idea of placing robotic tech next to real life energy.â
The songs began at home or in their studio at Liverpoolâs Invisible Wind Factory, laying down the main body of the tracks, then the band worked with various producers â including Marta Salogni (Bjork, MIA, Factory Floor), Andy Smith (Years & Years), Ash Workman (Christine & The Queens, Metronomy) and Joe Wills (video artist for Little Dragon) â as theyâve tried out different mixes and ideas to convey their messages.
They also teamed up with 8bit video artist Pastle Castle (Emily Garner) from Leeds, who created a Karaoke video series for the whole album; exploring Stealing Sheep's digital dimension and their shifting identities amidst changing cultural moods and millennial paraphernalia. ""It's a crazy time and it's challenging navigating through it, but it's like 'whatever' bring on the BIG WOWS.â
Description
"Big Wows' is heavier, harder and weirder than Stealing Sheepâs previous work. Bold neon pop songs with rave percussion, steelpans, dreamy segues and breathy experiments. The *fsszzt* sound of lemonade opens the album with a hyper-real sense of optimism that progressively reveals the cracks of dystopian irony amidst sugarâcoated pop; held together by Emily Lansleyâs bass guitar, Luciana Mercerâs drum kit, Rebecca Hawleyâs synths, and the trioâs swooning steely vocal harmonies.
+ First run of the LP comes pressed on coloured splatter vinyl and housed in a mirrorboard sleeve.
Stealing Sheep describe Big Wows as âa slow rushâ; taking shape over a period of nearly three years spent working out exactly what they wanted it to be and creating an album that levitated their identities as individuals as well as merging them into one unit âWeâre each finding our own creative intuition,â says Bex â..and then we come together...and we back each other up"" adds Lucy.
Just as the title suggests, Big Wows is both cynical and optimistic: dreaminess and pop dance rhythms are cut With eye rolling vocal styles inflected by heartfelt lyrical messages âWe hit upon this conversational-style between the vocals and have alternating lead melodies. There's a sarcastic tone to some of the music but there is always a strong wilfulness to incorporate honest integrity, which is hard to do but refreshing when it finally comes out.â
Side one opens with a burst of shimmery synths as âShow Loveâ and âBack in Timeâ lead you heart first into the headier feels of âJokin' Meâ and upbeat bounce of 'Why haven't I?' following into the more progressive grooves for âGirlâ then fading out with the narcoleptic comforts of âJust Dreamingâ.
Side two digs deeper into a dreamworld, with the manias and hallucinations of âBreatheâ and âTrue Coloursâ as well as the gorgeous disillusionment of the title track and ending with an unexpected tropical club banger âChoose Like Youâ.
Running through the whole record is a response to living in a tech era: âWe wanted sounds to represent TVs, computers and everyday glitchesâ says Bex âWe started to have this feeling that life is like a game and how you can malfunction when you're blasted with too much informationâŠâ
As well as composing with traditional instrumentation they also started songs solely on the computer; sequencing, building sounds, drum machines and responding to that non-emotional binary world. âThe big challenge,â continues Bex âis making machines sound organic, emotional, finding their flaws. Thatâs why Delia Derbyshire is so important to us. All the effects that she uses serve to humanise the machines.â
Since the release of their last album, 2015âs surreal and fantastical âNot Realâ, theyâve been in demand as multidisciplinary public artists as well as musicians â on projects including Wow Machine, which brings to life another more conceptual strand of âBig Wowsâ; in a mechanical light up stage with dancers and live music.
In summer 2018 they also performed at UK festivals with a 15 strong all-female procession to celebrate the centenary of Suffrage. âBeing female has become more of a theme in our workâ the band say. âIt's obviously always been there but now we're playing with it more conceptually and thinking about empowerment"
This greater confidence and rock-solid aesthetic mean that Stealing Sheep can take greater risks and reap more wonderful rewards. They have a broad range of influences â St Vincent, Michael Jackson, The Knife, Kraftwerk, Drake, Little Dragon - but they remain so resolutely and richly themselves. âWe try new things out and we get more confident about what we like.â says Bex. ""Thereâs a really good thing Grayson Perry says about developing your creative intuition. You get to a level as an artist where you know on a gut level what you like and what you donât like. It takes a long time to feel comfortable in that place, to know your palette, to know you like these drum sounds or whatever it is.â
Lucy is working with a full drum kit now instead of just toms, Emily is playing bass guitar, Bex is making her own synth patches and theyâre all using new equipment: they are developing and experimenting and moving forward together. âWe wanted the machine sounds to be juxtaposed against a full kit and bass guitar, which we tracked live to feel intentionally loose in places. We like the idea of placing robotic tech next to real life energy.â
The songs began at home or in their studio at Liverpoolâs Invisible Wind Factory, laying down the main body of the tracks, then the band worked with various producers â including Marta Salogni (Bjork, MIA, Factory Floor), Andy Smith (Years & Years), Ash Workman (Christine & The Queens, Metronomy) and Joe Wills (video artist for Little Dragon) â as theyâve tried out different mixes and ideas to convey their messages.
They also teamed up with 8bit video artist Pastle Castle (Emily Garner) from Leeds, who created a Karaoke video series for the whole album; exploring Stealing Sheep's digital dimension and their shifting identities amidst changing cultural moods and millennial paraphernalia. ""It's a crazy time and it's challenging navigating through it, but it's like 'whatever' bring on the BIG WOWS.â












