Wolf Alice is playing at U Street Music Hall on February 27 at 7:00 p.m. It's not only technically more advanced than any of their previous work, it had a hell of a lot more heart. "Giant Peach" is the future of Wolf Alice's sound, Rowsell explained. It’s kind of an amalgamation of quite a few ideas that we had, but I think it really works." "We kind of wanted a heavy, instrumental type song that we would eventually put vocals to. The first minute of the song is completely instrumental and builds in anger and momentum as it heads into Rowsell's chanting clean vocals. It’s really dancy and kind of aggressive." "It was our favorite thing to play in rehearsal," Rowsell admitted. It feels cleaner and more pop than anything the band produced in the past, but it also has a ton of energy. "Giant Peach" is the first glimpse of Wolf Alice's forthcoming album. Here is a song with the angry roots of their earlier work, and the catchy, singable choruses of what seems to be Wolf Alice's future. "Moaning Lisa Smile" embodies the bridge between the new and the old Wolf Alice. That melody became the opening riff for "Moaning Lisa Smile," which shifts between a gentle picking pattern and a heavy handed electric guitar pounding in your ears. It was a fun cover that song in a way that felt so different, and then we were like "actually this riff is quite good,"" Rowsell told me. "We used to sing Neil Young in a screamo way. It found placement on HBO's series The Leftovers this year, and garnered Wolf Alice a larger fan base outside of their native Britain. This song is probably Wolf Alice's most popular song. "We wanted to write about what she might be feeling when she was 18 or something," she said. "Moaning Lisa Smile" is a song about Lisa Simpson of the animated series The Simpsons, Rowsell told to me. "Giant Peach" is the party, and songs like "White Leather" are the hangover. "I’ve always described as the party and the hangover. It never quite caught it." White Leather has softer lyrics than the bands newer work, or as Rowsell joked: It’s about being on the outsides of the group looking in. We never felt like it got enough coverage," Roswell told me about the 2013 song. "White Leather" isn't Wolf Alice's most famous song, but it's one of their strongest, and is the second track on their single release, Fluffy. It’s been in loads of different forms besides the current one, but I think this is it's best form." "That’s where that dumbstruck thing came form. "We got the lyric by opening pages in the dictionary and stuff," Roswell explained to me. It's a mess of words that don't make perfect sense, but rhythmically, it works. "Don’t chicken out, it’s all good/ You’re allowed to be what you could./ Punch drunk, dumb struck, pot luck happy happy," she sang. The guitar was softer and twangier than on "Bros," and Rowsell's voice rose into a higher soprano. In 2013, Wolf Alice's first EP Blush became a little gentler in its sound. What you do when you have a best friend." "Lyrically, I think it resonates with people because it’s just quite sentimental. It’s kind of about kid friendship," Rowsell told me. It was about my friend that I’ve been friends with since I was three. Later, the band expanded to include a bassist and a drummer, and that's when Rowsell wrote her first song for the group called, "Bros." At the time, the band was only made up of two people, Rowsell and Joff Oddie. The beginning of Wolf Alice's sound can be traced to the band's first self-titled EP, Wolf Alice, release in 2010. I chatted with Ellie Rowsell, the band's lead vocalist, about five songs that define Wolf Alice's new sound: "Bros," 2013 After three EP releases, the band is releasing their first full album, My Love is Cool this summer - and it's less angry and more approachable than any of their previous work. British alternative rock band Wolf Alice is starting to take a turn towards pop.
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