Watch Savages star and perform in a new short film for ARTE TV

Stream te band's full film and live session directed by Antoine Carlier

All girl noise rock band Savages have released a new short film and live session for European broadcasting network ARTE TV, it has been recently revealed.

Savages have followed up the release of their latest album ‘Adore Life’ – released January 2016 and the first since 2013’s ‘Silence Yourself’ – with the new video production, shot by French director Antoine Carlier who directed their 2014 single ‘Strife’.

According to DIY the film was shot at Carrere Studio in La Plaine-Saint-Denis, France. The band play ‘Mechanics’, ‘Something New,’ ‘The Answer,’ and ‘Adore’ from the new record, and début track ‘Hit Me’. View the 30 minute film below.

Advertisement

“It’s time for you to wake up. There are people in this world dying to meet you,” starts with band member Gemma Thompson reciting a spoken word section, before gradually launching into their live performance.

Read more: Savages share intense video for new song ‘Adore’ – watch

In February, Queens Of The Stone Age frontman Josh Homme interviewed Savages for a US magazine.

Homme recently spoke to the band for Magnet Magazine following Savages’ recent second album release. Savages released new album ‘Adore Life’ last month (January 22).

In an excerpt from the interview published online, Homme asks if the band’s singer Jehnny Beth if she regards love as “a treatable mental illness?” or “a maze that one can be trapped in”. Beth replies: “Both. Definitely… Love is a slippery thing, yeah.”

Advertisement

Bassist Ayse Hassan adds: “The record kind of represents all the sections that love can be. It can fuck you up, it can be amazing. I think everyone experiences love in such a different way. Even the love that fucks you up, you can get so much from, and that can really shape you. With this record, especially with the lyrics, it reflects the sections of how love can be on so many levels.”

NMENME/Jenn Five

Beth continues: “It’s kind of a psychotic record in the way that it goes through very extreme moods, as well as the opposite. It looks to the future of how love can be one day and the freedom of that.”

Drummer Faye Milton goes on to describe the concepts of love and hate as “so close, it’s like laughter and crying. They both contain each other, I think.”

“I think in Savages we’ve always been interested in bringing opposites together, sound-wise,” Beth says. “Using that element of surprise, like true love sounds quiet or life and death. Bringing extremes together and seeing the collision it creates.”

Read an extended excerpt from the interview at the Magnet website.

Savages recently released a statement about their new album, the follow-up to 2013 debut ‘Silence Yourself’. It reads: “It’s about change and the power to change. It’s about metamorphosis and evolution. It’s about sticking to your guns and toughing it out. It’s about now, not tomorrow. It’s about recognising your potential. It’s about self-doubt and inaction. It’s about you. It’s about me. It’s about you and me and the others. It’s about the choices we make. It’s about finding the poetry and avoiding the cliché.”

You May Also Like

Advertisement

TRENDING

Advertisement

More Stories