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Arrow de wilde
Arrow de wilde












arrow de wilde

Some things come naturally, even if it takes a while to embrace that.

arrow de wilde

The singer notes that she was lucky enough to have a perfectly normal childhood-which is to say no one ever pushed her onstage, or pushed her to let her freak flag fly once she became comfortable in front of the mic. One might suggest that de Wilde was in some ways born to perform-her mother is celebrated photographer and filmmaker Autumn de Wilde, and her dad is drummer Aaron Sperske (who’s played with everyone from Father John Misty to Beachwood Sparks). Other than that, we didn’t try to over-think things.”Īnd she hints that Starcrawler is careful to never over-think things, including the band’s vaunted live shows. “I mean, we like it, and we’re excited it about. “We just kind of made the record with the idea of “Well, we’ll see what people thing,” de Wilde says of Starcrawler’s determination to break new ground.

arrow de wilde

paisley pop (“Broken Angels”) to cinematic alt-country (“Better Place”). Those with an endless appetite for cherry-bomb rawk will find plenty to love in “Runaway” and “Jetblack”, but She Said also serves up everything from’80s-L.A.

arrow de wilde

Along with her bandmates in Starcrawler-guitarists/siblings Henri and Bill Cash, bassist Tim Franco, and drummer Seth Carolina-de Wilde proceeds to do just that. It’s perhaps no accident that the first line on the album is “I’m about to show you what I’m made of”. While 'matur'e isn’t perhaps the right word to describe a band whose members are still in their early 20s, She Said gives us a Starcrawler that understands the importance of nuance. Only the truly imaginative are happy making the same record over and over again. And while that might sound like something of a backhanded compliment, it shouldn’t. Where previous releases served up a mixture of turbo-charged glam, bombshell alt rock, and broken-glass pop, Starcrawler’s latest, She Said, smooths off some of the edges. The band introduced itself to the world with clips like 2018’s “Chicken Woman”, where de Wilde starts by running blood-drenched up a deserted highway, after which things take a Texas Chainsaw Massacre-turn towards the truly weird. Those stupid enough to be standing there watching things through a screen had their smartphones kicked out of their hands, the upside being they were suddenly part of the show.įor the uninitiated, the quickest and easiest way to get a handle on the chaotic, explosive, and hyper-visual fucking brilliance of Starcrawler is the band’s videos, mostly DIY and often made in collaboration with de Wilde’s boyfriend Gilbert Trejo (son of character actor and all-round badass Danny Trejo). And to watch her is to indeed be floored by someone who understands that, when you call yourself an entertainer, you better goddamn well entertain.Įarly shows had de Wilde showing up onstage in a straitjacket, her mouth filled with blood packets that ended up sprayed all over those lucky enough to be in the front row. The de Wilde who fronts Starcrawler today is worlds away from those beginnings, the 6-foot 3-inch, wildly expressive singer having figured out early on in the band’s existence that nothing entertains like a spectacle. We were Tumblr girls, and when we were walking up onstage I remember grabbing her hand and saying ‘Promise me we’ll never, ever do this again.’ And ‘Promise me that I’ll never ever do this again.’ I remember standing up there in front of the whole school, my eyes hyper-focussed on the audience. I really wanted to do it-I was singing, and my friend was playing ukulele or some stupid shit. “It was a talent show in sixth or seventh grade. “My first show, in general, was terrifying,” the singer notes. That doesn’t mean that she was averse to trying.

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I like attention, but I didn’t know how to get it-how to put myself out there.” “It’s weird because I wasn’t one of those shy kids who just wanted to be alone. “I was painfully shy, but also I’ve always liked being around people,” de Wilde acknowledges, on the line with the Straight from a Northern California stop. Scratch an on-stage extrovert, and you’ll often find someone who ended up hanging back in the shadows as a kid. As insanely captivating as she is fronting L.A.’s Starcrawler today, there was a time when the last thing Arrow de Wilde wanted was the world’s attention.














Arrow de wilde