Upcoming Dates
Thursday 18 July 24, 7:00 PM
Thursday 18 July 24, 7:00 PM
Raw, heavy, aggressive and a times genuinely creepy, London and Kent based metallers Graphic
Nature are one of the most energized and exciting new bands to emerge from the British metal
scene in years.
Coming into existence after singer Harvey Freeman joined guitarists Pete Woolven, Matas
Michailovskis, bassist Charlie Smith and drummer Jack Bowdery in their previous band Cove, the
quintet realised while listening to early 2000s nu-metal on the way home from shows that their
ambitions were more in tune with Slipknot, Korn and Deftones than the metalcore they’d been
playing. Taking their name from a track on Deftones’ Koi No Yokan album, in 2019 Graphic Nature
announced themselves with the single Grit, and immediately began carving a name for themselves
as a ferocious new force in British metal.
With their new EP New Skin, their first for new label Rude Records, they’re doubling down. Mixing
moments of snarling nu-metal aggro and the scalding fury of Slipknot’s debut album with
instrumental passages that at times recall the genius of Nine Inch Nails’ Trent Reznor, Harvey says
“this is where we’ve nailed the Graphic Nature sound”.
Beefier in some places, angrier in others, and more sophisticated at times if you look closer, the
result is an EP of songs that carry the spirit of nu-metal, sharpened and bulked-up for present day,
which lands with the confidence of a metal fist.
“We’re always trying to go further,” says Harvey. “We’re always thinking, ‘How disgusting can we
make it without going too far?’ Or with the drum ‘n’ bass elements, we listen to a lot of that in the
van, and it all has the same feel as metal: there’s build ups and breakdowns, the same fucking
formula. We thought, ‘Why don't we add shit like this and do other things with music, and not stick
to being a five-piece metal band?’ So, Pete would write a drum ‘n’ bass hook and send it to us, and
we’d be like, ‘Holy shit, this works.’ It sounds sick, in my opinion.”
“I really like if we can make it a bit fucking creepy with the spoken word parts, or having some
whispers here and there,” he continues. “We're always looking for new ways to make people
uncomfortable when they listen to our music - I enjoy that.”
New Skin will do just that. Created and recorded during the pandemic, with the band working
remotely and emailing tracks to one another, before converging at G1 Studio in Somerset with
producer George Lever (Sleep Token, Palm Reader, Loathe), it shows off both the band’s boiling fury
and ability to create a sense of ambient dread.
Though the songs don’t specifically deal with COVID, the strange times and lockdown isolation
nevertheless had an effect on the creative process, as well as the band’s members personally. As a
man who often writes lyrics as they come to him, rather than simply when needed, Harvey’s
explosive words come from a place of darkness and frustration.
“I tend to come up with lyrics when I’m feeling pretty low,” he says. “Most of the time where it really
gets creative is if I'm in the mood set where everything's overwhelming and on top of me. When it’s
3am and I can't sleep, that's when I'll be like, ‘Okay, let's, let's write a song’. And when I'm in that
state, I can write three or four songs. But it's one of those double-edged swords, because if I'm in a
good mood, nothing gets written because I have no problems.
“It's never that I'm mad at the world or anything, it's more it's more about coping with things that
you deal with inside,” he continues. “A lot of us don't really talk about it, or we don't know how to
express ourselves. I find that writing lyrics down and then shouting them back at people really helps
to get it all out.”
It’s caustic, and deeply personal, but Harvey wants this to connect with people who are feeling the
same way as him. Because, he says, it could be about much more than music.
“I want people to relate to the lyrics as well as digging the fuck out of the instrumentals,” he says.
“It’s okay to be angry, it’s okay to be sad and if Graphic Nature helps you cope, I’ve done my job. As
long as people give a shit about what we’ve done as a band, that’s all I can ask for. I want our
audience to be honest about how they feel, sometimes writing your thoughts down on paper is the
first step to controlling your emotions, as hard as that can be. Collaboration is key: keep relationships
strong and speak to your quiet friends. You could save someone’s life.”
All of this makes New Skin a triumph. Musically, Graphic Nature are an explosion of kinetic heaviness
that’s so often missing from heavy music, done with imagination and creativity to give them a
personality. And underneath, their soul is one many will be able to relate to. As the band continue to
rise – having already shared the stage with the likes of Employed To Serve and Palm Reader - there’s
even more confidence now in who they are and what they’re doing.
Things are only going to get bigger. As Harvey puts it himself: “Graphic Nature are here to stay.”
The Live Rooms Station Road Chester CH1 3DR
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