KATY KIRBY - COOL DRY PLACE (COKE BOTTLE CLEAR VINYL) - Good Records To Go

KATY KIRBY - COOL DRY PLACE (COKE BOTTLE CLEAR VINYL)

LP

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TRACKS:
SIDE A:
1. Eyelids
2. Juniper
3. Peppermint
4. Traffic!

SIDE B:
5. TapTwice
6. SecretLanguage
7. Portals
8. CoolDryPlace
9. Fireman

All songs written (and sung) by Katy Kirby.
Secret Language" incorporates elements of "Hallelujah" by Leonard Cohen.

Engineered by Alberto Sewald
Produced by Alberto Sewald and Logan Chung.

Additional engineering by Joelton Mayfield, Austin Arnold, Logan Chung, and Ross Collier.
"Traffic!" engineered by Quinn Redmond and Alberto Sewald
Tracks 1, 7, and 9 mixed by Alberto Sewald at Le Tricycle in Berry Hill, TN.
Tracks 2-6 and 8 mixed by Bennett Littlejohn.
All tracks mastered by Carl Saff.

Recorded at Le Tricycle (Nashville), OOKO Studios (Nashville), Nashville Omnichord Supply Co., Camp Kirby (Spicewood, TX), Prospector Studios (Nashville)

Katy Kirby is a Texas-based songwriter and indie rock practitioner with an affinity for unspoken rules, misunderstanding, and boredom. She was born, raised, and homeschooled by two ex-cheerleaders in small-town Texas and started singing in church amidst the pasteurized-pop choruses of evangelical worship. Like many bible belt late-millennials, Katy grew up on a strict diet of this dependably uncool genre and accordingly, Cool Dry Place finds her dismantling it. “I can hear myself fighting that deeply internalized impulse to make things that are super pleasant or approachable,” she says.
 
Though Katy hasn’t fully overcome the itch to please, it’s to a listener’s benefit. Instead of eradicating the pop sensibilities of her past, she warps them, lacing sugary hooks with sneaky rage, twisting affectionate tones into matter-of-fact reproach, and planting seemingly serene melodies with sonic jabs. The fun is in the clash.
 
The nine tracks that make up Cool Dry Place are miscellaneous in subject (motherhood, late capitalism, disintegrating relationships,) but unified by the angle from which they’re told: from a person re-learning to process life with intense attention. Each song is a catalog of fragments, the number of segments in an orange or the cut of an obsessively-worn shirt, distilled into meditations on the bizarre and microscopic exchanges that make up modern life — a relationship splintering, an uncomfortable pause, an understanding finally found. These emotional dioramas are moderated by the angular storytelling that unites Gillian Welch and Phoebe Bridgers, a favor for the conventions of short fiction over confession.