When Marie Le Conte moved from Nantes to London she rejected her French identity, along with a teenage infatuation with Phoenix' fourth album. Years later, she reflects on how the "youth and hope and enthusiasm bottled inside ten neat and clean little songs" actually allows her to have a conversation with her past self about life, love and becoming.
When Marie Le Conte moved from Nantes to London she rejected her French identity, along with a teenage infatuation with Phoenix' fourth album. Years later, she reflects on how the "youth and hope and enthusiasm bottled inside ten neat and clean little songs" actually allows her to have a conversation with her past self about life, love and becoming.
With this year's Supersonic Festival just a week away, tQ's Claire Biddles selects 10 must-sees from a stacked lineup, from Nigerian rap to Philadelphia queercore to locally-sourced Brum heaviness, via a screening of a cult Czech gothic drama, a heavy dose of weirdo folk music and more