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Thomston premieres video to ‘Collarbones’

April 12, 2015

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Thomston premieres video to ‘Collarbones’ 
‘Backbone EP’ pre-streaming worldwide on Spotify
LIVE: Paris, UK and Belgium shows confirmed

“Smooth, gently blooming…the perfect introduction to an intriguing artist” Fader
“An exciting pop hope…the kind of hard-hitting opening hand that will travel far” DIY
“Sparse, slow, in a state of nocturnal distress…you’ll love what Thomston does” Guardian
“Musically lush and lyrically intimate…what’s up with the teenagers in New Zealand?” Noisey
“Synthy, contemplative…Thomston certainly knows one end of a melody from the other” Popjustice 
“Deeply personal…shows off his profound gifts as a singer and songwriter” Nylon

PRE-STREAM THE ‘BACKBONE’ EP ON SPOTIFY: http://t.co/pQSPse9str

Thomston has premiered the video to ‘Collarbones’, the lead track to his ‘Backbone’ EP (which is streaming exclusively worldwide on Spotify, a week upfront of release). Now managed by Saiko (Lorde, Mt Eden), this follows the international success of 2014’s ‘Argonaut’ EP, which has already been streamed over 5 million times and seen the New Zealander named a One To Watch from the likes of Billboard and KCRW to Triple J. Thomston will play his debut European shows at The Great Escape Festival, Pukkelpop and in Paris (more will be announced shortly).

Describing the ‘Collarbones’ video, Thomston writes: We shot this on a rural road in the middle of the city with farm animals all around watching the takes. It’s about being so consumed by someone wasting away, that it happens to you yourself. The video is about moral agency, and being in the front seat with the choice to pull over, or to keep on driving.”

Thomston is the solo alias of prodigious 19-year-old singer and producer Thomas Stoneman. He was born in London but largely raised in an Auckland suburb which hosts a rainforest, the bustling city-centre and black-sand beaches in surprising proximity. Growing up, music was synonymous with the enforced-tuition of classical piano by his parents, and so Thomston skipped the Top 40 in favour of whatever his shape-shifting childhood interests found their next outlet in (from acting, film-making to writing). One day, the offer to enter a nationwide songwriting competition got passed round school, and Thomston’s restless attention-span focused in on the smooth and melodic nineties-to-noughties R&B which his classical roots had once soured a love for. He won the competition, but the greater gain – the confidence and curiosity to write Pop songs – was still to come.

Thomston’s new EP, ‘Backbone’, is a vivid and brooding snapshot of suburban teenage transitions, suggesting a talent on the ascent barely a year into making music. Frequently, it feels as inspired by the sparse, intricate electronics of SOHN as the futuristic, soulful croon of Justin Timberlake: Thomston also writes mainly whilst wandering around his empty neighbourhood in the early hours, which lends a nocturnal atmosphere and lyrical openness that sit beyond his years. The crisp groove of ‘Grey’, for instance, captures a tight-knit group of friends whose individual ambitions to go places might one day push them apart (“will we pick up if we leave it off? / Can we start again once we have stopped?”) whilst the hip-hop-infused ‘To and Fro’ depicts a dead-end local romance. Friendship and questions about The Future ultimately abound throughout: ‘Second To You’ suggests a cut-and-run from those who don’t pull their weight in your life, whilst the vaguely unsettling Bon-Iver ambience of ‘Collarbones’ in fact addresses a friend developing an eating disorder (who has since pulled through).

Taking the frustrations and freedom of small-town adolescence as a backdrop, Thomston soon reached a crossroads of his own: he completed high-school the same year his songwriting flourished, with the gamble of music on one side and a sturdy potential degree to study Urban Planning at University on the other (“it’s all about patterns, which I find interesting,” he says now). In the end, Thomston’s choice was made for him when some early demos were passed to Lorde’s management, who offered to jump on board. And whilst 2015 looks set to take Thomston beyond the intimate but seemingly on-the-up New Zealand scene, his ‘Backbone’ EP is in part a polaroid-moment of before it all gets complicated – when a group of friends grow up together, reach a certain age, and just don’t know what will happen next.

May 12          Les Etoiles                     Paris
May 14-16     Great Escape Festival     Brighton
August 20-22  Pukkelpop Festival          Belgium

 

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