Billi Marten sat in a chair with a white vest top on

Billie Marten to headline Manchester Gorilla in May

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Billi Marten sat in a chair with a white vest top on

Billie Marten has today announced her fourth record Drop Cherries for release on 7 April via Fiction Records. Recorded entirely on tape in Somerset and Wales late last summer, Drop Cherries marks the very first time that Billie Marten has both written and co-produced (with Dom Monks) one of her records; following critically-lauded 2021 album Flora FaunaFeeding Seahorses by Hand (2019) and Writing of Blues and Yellows (2016). 

The new albumā€™s lead single ā€˜This Is How We Moveā€™ also arrives today after premiering with Chris Hawkins on BBC 6 Music this morning, with Marten explaining: ā€œA song about finding the natural rhythm and pacing between two people. Working together and flowing as one ā€“ the relationship dance. John Martyn / JJ Cale ease of recording. Double bass Nick Pini. ā€˜You keep the garden, and Iā€™ll take the view, this is how we move.ā€™ Different wants and needs, catering for each otherā€™s happiness. DESERVING TO BE LOVED.ā€

Flora FaunaĀ was lavished with praise by the likes of CLASH (9/10), The Line Of Best Fit, Uncut, NME, Dork, The Independent, Gigwise (all 4* reviews) as well as The Sunday Times Culture and DIY in 2021. The record also landed multiple radio playlists at national broadcasters BBC Radio 1 (twice Hottest Record in the World for ā€˜Creature Of Mineā€™ and ā€˜Human Replacementā€™), BBC 6 Music (including a string of A List records) and Radio X.

With a fourth record looming over her, Billie Marten at last learned to stop thinking about what others want to hear and finally started to trust her own instincts. ā€œWhen Iā€™m trying to write, the creative door is closed most of the time,ā€ she says. ā€œWhen it briefly opens, I know Iā€™ve stumbled across moments of true emotion and insight; they give no warning and are often unpredictable. I canā€™t force the process, something Iā€™m realising more with each album. And thatā€™s why I know that Drop Cherries is a collection of songs expressing genuine intuitive feeling.ā€

The title is taken from a tale she heard from a friend just before she was starting to create songs for the album, and the title track came soon after. Itā€™s a metaphor where the gift of cherries stands for offering someone your love; doing anything you can to make them happy. ā€œDropping cherries,ā€ she begins, ā€œis such a strong, visceral image that I tried to channel throughout recording in Somerset and Wales, to capture the vibrancy, unpredictability, and occasional chaos one experiences within a relationship.ā€

ā€œImagine stamping blood-red cherries onto a clean, cream carpet and tell me thatā€™s not how love feels.ā€
Drop Cherries is a series of vignettes highlighting different pieces of a relationship, while trying to fit them together. From celebrating moments of the mundane (ā€˜Just Usā€™), through deep existential questioning (ā€˜Devil Swimā€™, ā€˜Acid Toothā€™, ā€˜Arrowsā€™), to the final resolve which is the pure simplicity of sharing a moment with someone you love (ā€˜Drop Cherriesā€™, ā€˜I Bend To Himā€™).

Itā€™s often the case that each record has to be a new ā€˜statementā€™ for the artist, a re-branding, a progression. But Billie Martenā€™s statement is always the same: ā€œIā€™m simply searching for clarity. Iā€™m re-examining the same feelings I had when I first started writing: I feel different to others, so Iā€™ll write about what thatā€™s like and see if I can work out why that is.ā€

ā€œIf I ever do, maybe Iā€™ll stop writing.ā€


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