They are also beginning to understand the joys of touring life. It suits them very well to be able to leave their lives and enter the magical realm of frozen time and anonymity. Sim Savage said, “No one knows who you are, which is a relief. And you don’t have to deal with the realities of normal life. It’s scary to go home, but when you’re away It’s great to just do what we do.” Sim Savage stopped and Sam interjected, “Anyway, I’ve been gigging since before this year, just never going further than London, but I’ve been gigging since I was about 13.” It continues.”
They’re also experiencing the inevitable motions of being a touring band, where the real world continues to revolve around its axis while you’re away, deep inside the life you’ve only dreamed of. You rush in and get stuck in an instant. It certainly felt like that when we started our long tour, when we were away for a month,” explains Sim Savage. “It felt like we just came back and reopened, and obviously everyone has changed…people have moved out of where you live…when we leave I think time always passes really, really quickly, and when I get home, it’s gone again.” Really “Take it slow,” Sam insists.
Going further, they liken their touring experience to going into “survival mode,” or stripping down to the bare essentials. “You just push all the thoughts away and do the work that needs to be done,” Sim Savage explains. “But it’s really nice. Laura and I have been best friends for almost 10 years now, so it feels like home when we’re together. It’s nice. We didn’t get on each other’s nerves too much. ‘Nevertheless,’ she laughed, glancing at her bandmates. “For us, everything is so exciting and new, so we’re really enjoying every minute.” This also continues with meeting as many people as possible after the set. That was in the early days when the two were working as gig punters. “I remember when I was young and seeing bands that I really liked and seeing them featured on merchandise, I felt so special,” Sim Savage recalls. That’s an important thing to do. ”
This trio has never been driven by ambition or driven by ego. “When we formed this band, we just wanted to play gigs,” explains Sim Savage. “What we want to do now is write an album that we’re very happy with.” Of their long-awaited debut, Sim Savage says they’re entering new independent territory, adding, “We’re “I started doing my own demos, which I had never done before,” she explains. “We record the drums live in the studio, but everything else is done at home. was given.”
