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The Truth Is Out - White Lies

The mystery behind the hottest band in Britain is lifted...

White Lies drummer Jack Lawrence-Brown looks confused. “I’ve just had a phone call from someone at the Dundee Post saying they want to interview me,” he tells the band’s publicist, as we meet in a box-room where the drummer has been courting this kind of attention for the past couple of hours. “It might not have been them, actually,” he adds, looking even more perplexed. “I might have just made that up - but it was someone ringing about an interview.”

As White Lies’ publicist goes off to address the situation, Lawrence-Brown takes his seat on a compact settee; behind him, a window captures a moving snapshot of West Londoners going about their business down on the street below. He looks tired, but says he’s excited, “really excited. I just got off the train earlier and we had our first tube underground poster up.” He smiles. “I’ve been waiting to see one of them.”

As the constant stream of interview requests suggest, this is a busy period for Lawrence-Brown, and his two bandmates, singer Harry McVeigh and bassist Charles Cave (who are both doing phone interviews in other cramped corners of their record label’s office). Next week, the three childhood friends, all from London, release their much anticipated debut album ‘To Lose My Life’ – an extraordinary collection of songs that tackle people’s most intrinsic experiences – love and death – amid a musical backdrop which, for the most part, is tremendously uplifting. A week later and they’re scheduled to embark on their third full UK tour in almost as many months. (Not counting their two trips to America and brief visit to Japan.) It’s an impressive schedule given that this time last year they hadn’t even played a gig together as White Lies.

“I hadn’t thought about it in that sort of context,” Lawrence-Brown admits, pausing for a moment. “Obviously it’s been moving quite quickly but…yeah, that is a thought, that we hadn’t even played a gig this time last year.”

Even by modern standards, White Lies’ transition from first gig to first album has been a particularly quick one. But, as Lawrence-Brown notes, the trio’s previous incarnation as another band, Fear of Flying (who enjoyed moderate success releasing two now highly sought after middle-of-the-road indie singles on an a small London label) meant that they “knew what we wanted when we started this band”. He calls White Lies “an advancement” on Fear of Flying, who the three formed in their mid-teens, and insists that, contrary to what certain sections of the music press have written, the group, now all aged 20, naturally “morphed” into White Lies. “We’ve learned so much about the industry - the dark side of the industry - not to sound like a horrible cliché, but that’s what we learned from Fear of Flying,” he says, seriously. “We learned how people work and how it doesn’t help to give all the time. It doesn’t help to be in people’s faces telling them they should listen to your band because if you’re good they will listen to your band, and they will want to sign it.”

And that’s how it went for White Lies. After disbanding Fear of Flying towards the end of 2007, the trio launched a MySpace page for White Lies which featured nothing but a black background and – at first - one song, ‘Unfinished Business’. To say that the music industry was excited by them would be an understatement. When the band walked out on stage to play their first gig at the Hoxton Bar & Kitchen in East London last February, the audience consisted of nearly every A&R in the capital, all eager to see if White Lies warranted such intrigue. They did. After a frenzied bidding war, the trio signed to Fiction Records – a subprint of Universal – a month later. When McVeigh joins us from another interview, he says the mystery the band created meant their first show “was an experience for everyone”. “Most people hadn’t even seen what we looked like,” he continues. “We proved…I don’t know, we just made it real I suppose and made it live, and made the songs real, and when people saw it…we were amazed that we were able to do it.”

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(5)
  • Definitely the band of 2009 - this is what British talent is about!

    ~ by sugar 1/14/2009

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  • Absolutely toss band, bunch of posho London media arseholes ripping Joy Division off, woohoo, as if we didn't have enough shite Ian Curtis inspired music already. I'd be more interested if they ripped off Curtis Mayfield.

    ~ by soothsayer 1/15/2009

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  • They are fucking terrible! They make The Killers sound like Radiohead

    ~ by Marky 1/15/2009

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  • man, if ever there's a band that didnt deserve the hype its this one! there's so many cool bands that actually played hundreds of gigs and still never got an a&r man there. smells like a "boy band" copy of editors to me..i smell a rat. one with a big marketing budget.

    ~ by lawrence 1/19/2009

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  • just listened to the album - outstanding a breath of fresh air after a terrible year for new bands 2008 was the worst year in a long, long time. glasvegas FFS signed A. Glaswegian

    ~ by Jock 1/22/2009

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  • @Gigwise Hmm, there might be some technical reason they're doing them in a particular order. Christ knows.
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    benyacobi on Fri Jul 03 19:36:07 via TweetDeck
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