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Kate Miller-Heidke

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<strong>Kate</strong> <strong>Miller</strong>-<strong>Heidke</strong><br />

Nightflight<br />

We all know her voice by now. Without question, they are some of the most gloriously elastic vocal chords in<br />

contemporary music. In one song, she will sound as hushed and intimate as a lover before sleep, before<br />

reverberating with an operatic force so great, it seems possible walls might collapse and time will fold in on<br />

itself. Across the Pacific and Atlantic - from Australia to Asia, the US and UK - stunned audiences have been<br />

mesmerised and transformed, one at a time, by the extraordinary talent that is <strong>Kate</strong> <strong>Miller</strong>-<strong>Heidke</strong>.<br />

Now, following double-platinum sales for her last album (2008’s Curiouser), sets at Coachella, international<br />

dates supporting Ben Folds, acclaimed opera performances in Australia and the UK, and catching US critics -<br />

from the New York Times to the New Yorker - off-guard, <strong>Kate</strong> <strong>Miller</strong>-<strong>Heidke</strong> returns with Nightflight, her<br />

first solo album in three years. Over 11 songs, Nightflight signals a new-found sophistication in song-writing<br />

that sees <strong>Kate</strong> meditate on homesickness, mortality, love and surrender, in an album that is both sonically lush<br />

and emotionally stark, deeply personal and yet utterly panoramic.<br />

Written between the frenetic jolt of London and the rising floodwaters of Toowoomba, Nightflight showcases<br />

songs about real people’s lives: family members who have died, teenagers who went missing in the ‘90s, friends<br />

looking for love in the wrong places and <strong>Kate</strong>’s own longing for home. In previous albums, <strong>Kate</strong> has immersed<br />

herself in high cabaret drama, polished electro-pop and heart-arresting ballads. With Nightflight, her mission<br />

was simple: to focus on the craft of pure human storytelling with clear-eyed clarity.<br />

“Everything I’ve ever done has been a reaction against the previous thing,” <strong>Kate</strong> says. “Nightflight is definitely a<br />

more vulnerable and exposed record than anything I’ve done before. If Curiouser was a playful, dysfunctional<br />

adolescent, Nightflight is more like a damaged, melancholy person in her late 20s. With Nightflight, we wanted<br />

something darker and more organic, more beautiful and more expansive.”<br />

WRITING THE ALBUM<br />

In the three years since Curiouser - an album with singles that went gold (‘Can’t Shake It’), platinum (‘Caught<br />

In The Crowd’) and double platinum (‘Last Day On Earth’) - <strong>Kate</strong> embarked on the kind of projects you’d expect<br />

to see on someone’s CV over their lifetime.<br />

As well as touring non-stop across 2009 and 2010, she played major international festivals including Coachella<br />

(US), Lilith Fair (US) and Rifflandia (Canada), roughly 80 shows with Ben Folds across North America, the UK<br />

and Europe, as well as her own shows in Asia. Alongside long-term collaborator and partner Keir Nuttall, she<br />

www.katemillerheidke.com


also became the first Australian to win the Grand Prize in the International Song-writing Competition for ‘Caught<br />

In The Crowd’ (the judging panel included Tom Waits and The Cure’s Robert Smith), performed opera alongside<br />

David Wenham (‘Jerry Springer: The Opera’, Sydney Opera House), more opera in the UK (‘The Death of<br />

Klinghoffer’, English National Opera), scored 1.5 million YouTube hits for her novelty song ‘Are You Fucking<br />

Kidding Me?’, released an electro side-project album (Fatty Gets a Stylist) and infected New York with an<br />

earworm in the form of ‘Are You Ready’, a Fatty track used in the state’s lottery commercials.<br />

Living out of a suitcase eventually takes its toll though. There are the long flights, the unceasing jetlag and the<br />

disorientation of wandering through duty free shops without a sense of time zones. “Home becomes this<br />

intangible sense of what heaven must be like,” <strong>Kate</strong> says. “So at the end of all that, we decided to go in to<br />

hiding in Toowoomba for a few months in late 2010 and early 2011, to sort of cut off contact with the outside<br />

world and try to collate these scraps of ideas and half-songs. At the end of all this constant touring, it seemed<br />

like it would be a real haven.”<br />

<strong>Kate</strong> and Keir returned to Australia to set up a semi-permanent home at the old home of Keir’s maternal<br />

grandparents, who had recently died within a short span of one another. “After they both passed away, the<br />

house had been on the market but hadn’t sold, so we decided to move in,” <strong>Kate</strong> says. “It was a lovely house<br />

looking over the range. The most striking feature of the house is how everything of Keir’s grandparents’ is still<br />

there. Furniture, photos, bathroom stuff. Even day-to-day stuff like an empty wallet or Keir’s grandma’s halfused<br />

lipstick. That permeates Nightflight: a basic sense of our own mortality and the complete impermanence<br />

of things.”<br />

Moving from London to Toowoomba was a culture shock, but <strong>Kate</strong> and Keir embraced how Toowoomba<br />

afforded them isolation. Eventually though, they got more isolation than they anticipated when floods rolled into<br />

town that January. “Toowoomba sits on the top of a big mountain and the house had beautiful expansive views.<br />

That also meant we could see the rain coming in from miles and miles away. There was something eerie and<br />

slightly sinister about experiencing heavy rain that doesn’t let up for so long” At their peak, the floods closed off<br />

roads and literally shut <strong>Kate</strong> and Keir in for weeks. “We couldn’t leave if we wanted to,” she recalls.<br />

All of this informed what you now hear on Nightflight. “The writing process was shrouded by death in a way,”<br />

<strong>Kate</strong> says, “but also these contrasts. The fact we were living in an old person’s house, but we’re both young, the<br />

fact we were living in Toowoomba, a place we didn’t feel we belong. So there are all these contrasts between<br />

light and shade, life and death, joy and melancholy, and honesty versus obscuring the truth.”<br />

RECORDING IN MELBOURNE, MIXING IN SUFFOLK<br />

After writing the album in Toowoomba, <strong>Kate</strong> and Keir recorded Nightflight over two months in Melbourne.<br />

“For a long time we thought we’d do it in England, but we wanted that option to collaborate with people we<br />

know and like,” <strong>Kate</strong> says. “Toowoomba was so isolating and we didn’t then want to put ourselves through that<br />

again. It did take a while to remember how to converse with other people after that long,” she adds, laughing.<br />

“We worked from midday until midnight for months recording the thing. We lived and breathed it.”<br />

Keir Nuttall co-produced Nightflight alongside engineer Rob Long and legendary rock producer Lindsay Gravina<br />

(Rowland S. Howard, Mick Harvey, The Living End, British India) in Lindsay’s Birdland studio in Prahran.<br />

“Lindsay is kind of a Melbourne institution,” <strong>Kate</strong> says. “He’s a strange genius who rarely ventures out into the<br />

sunlight. We never saw him eat. For a while we suspected he was a vampire. He has this track record of making<br />

really dynamic, warm-sounding records with a lot of great people. Especially the Roland S. Howard stuff he’s<br />

produced. It sounds so alive.”<br />

Instrumentalists included James O’Brien (The Boat People, Machine Translations, YesYou) on bass, Gemma<br />

Turvey and J.P. Shilo on piano and a mini choir of friends. <strong>Kate</strong> also enlisted a small army of drummers: John<br />

Castle (Washington, Lior, The Bamboos), Steve Pope (Angus & Julia Stone) and Dan Parsons and Luke Moller<br />

(Shane Nicholson) on violin/viola. After recording in Melbourne, <strong>Kate</strong> and Keir took Nightfligh to Suffolk in rural<br />

England, where it was mixed by Cenzo Townshend (U2, Florence And The Machine, Kaiser Chiefs, Snow Patrol)<br />

over three weeks.<br />

Song By Song | Nightflight<br />

1. RIDE THIS FEELING<br />

<strong>Kate</strong> says: “Like a lot of songs on the record, ‘Ride This Feeling’ is about drinking. [Laughs] That was really our only refuge<br />

in Toowoomba, especially when the floods happened. We would watch the news and see all our friends’ Facebook updates,<br />

where they were covered in mud, getting in and helping out. The fact we were trapped really started to drive me to drink.<br />

On the night of the floods, we went out to the pub because you just felt like you wanted to be with people at that point.<br />

www.katemillerheidke.com


Usually, nightlife in Toowoomba is nothing special, but that particular night, there was electricity in the air. But in the days<br />

following, I started to feel even more isolated, not being able to help my friends and family whose houses had flooded.”<br />

2. SARAH<br />

<strong>Kate</strong> says: “This story happened to a friend of mine, one of my best friends from high school, and the story’s told from her<br />

point of view. It is nearly all real details—I’ve used some literary licence—but it’s mostly real. In Grade 9, her friend went<br />

missing at a music festival and two weeks later, just turned up at her parents’ house with no memory of where she had<br />

been. My friend was never allowed to see her again, because everybody blamed her. To this day, my friend doesn’t know<br />

what happened, because her parents broke off contact. My friend and I had a sleepover in Grade 10, and she told this story<br />

to me over several hours while we were lying in our beds with our lights off. I’ve never forgotten it. It was a story that has<br />

always haunted me.”<br />

3. NIGHTFLIGHT<br />

<strong>Kate</strong> says: “‘Nightflight’ is about the journey flying to and from Australia (between the US and the UK). It’s such a huge trek.<br />

There’s always that sense of purgatory when I’m getting on those flights: wandering around duty free, feeling somehow<br />

semi-human and sort of losing yourself. I actually love flying and the excitement of long distance travel, but there is this<br />

melancholy, bittersweet feeling of leaving loved ones behind. Doing this kind of work, you do miss out on a lot of things:<br />

birthdays, weddings and funerals.”<br />

4. THE TIGER INSIDE WILL EAT THE CHILD<br />

<strong>Kate</strong> says: “‘The Tiger Inside’ was originally a track written for out Fatty Gets a Stylist project. It was always a great song,<br />

and when we started doing it live as a duo it just worked really well. You tap into something completely different using a<br />

different voice and acoustic instruments, so we thought it was worth sharing. It’s one of those songs that doesn’t have a<br />

definitive version, and I think that’s true of a lot of good songs: they should be able to stand up. We’re not religious in any<br />

way, but it’s kind of a Zen Buddhist song, really, of trying to hang on to that elusive moment that slips through your fingers<br />

as soon as you think about it directly.”<br />

5. LET ME FADE<br />

<strong>Kate</strong> says: “For this song, we used the same string arranger who worked on Peter Gabriel’s Scratch My Back record. It’s<br />

basically a song about wanting to disappear, about surrendering the idea of yourself and shrinking into nothing for a while,<br />

which I guess is kind of depressing [laughs]. This is one of those songs where I dreamt the chorus, and I dreamt it was this<br />

bunch of kids singing it, really joyfully and with abandonment, all together. When you dream the words and melody<br />

together, that is always great.”<br />

6. I’LL CHANGE YOUR MIND<br />

“It is hard to write love songs without them coming out sounding cheesy, that’s for sure, especially upbeat ones—they’re just<br />

nearly impossible. But this one actually has sad lyrics, and I find that exciting: putting sad lyrics to a happy song. It’s<br />

basically about a woman stalking her ex, whom she can’t quite get over, spending all night in the car outside his house, and<br />

shivering, thinking that … when he wakes up and sees her there he’ll change his mind about her.” Story of how you courted<br />

Keir? [Laughs] “It’s just a futile hope. If you listen to the lyrics, she’s never going to change his mind; she’s deluded.”<br />

7. HUMILIATION<br />

Tribal/jungle territory. Written in a different way? “It was written on the computer, whereas everything else came from<br />

organic instruments. This one was mostly Keir, he writes on the computer all the time. With Ableton, you can play the piano<br />

with the keys and just mix different loops. And it’s a song about being socially awkward, and I’m like that all the time.<br />

Particularly in music industry schmoozy things, which neither Keir nor I deal with very well. It’s just so full of artifice, but<br />

look: I have good days and bad days. I also think it’s the fact Keir and I have spent the last eight years in the same room<br />

together; it’s really not healthy. You forget how to speak to other people, because you develop this strange language<br />

between the two of you, and it’s quite exclusive, in that it excludes other people.”<br />

8. IN THE DARK<br />

<strong>Kate</strong> says: “This is really Keir’s song, and it was written fairly quickly. It’s about his grandparents, who lived together in<br />

Toowoomba and passed away. The first time we played it to his mother was quite hard, because you tap into things you<br />

didn’t even know you felt. The car sits where he parked it / no more clicks on the clock / Clean and neat as he kept it / Now<br />

he’s gone, gone, gone’—because that car is still in that garage. For us, ‘In the Dark’ sums up a lot of themes on the record,<br />

somehow, the contrast between the dark and the light. The outro of the song is about moving towards the light, which is<br />

death, but at the same time it’s the start of something new.”<br />

9. BEAUTIFUL DARLING<br />

<strong>Kate</strong> says: “This is another dream song, where Keir dreamt he was lying in the grass, listening to Cyndi Lauper’s new single<br />

and crying because he was so moved [laughs]. He woke up with the chorus in his mind: ‘Beautiful darling / you make me<br />

believe / it could all be okay / hope is a real thing.’ This song was written very late in the recording process. We only had<br />

about a week left in the studio and we just frantically got everything together to put that one down. It’s great when songs<br />

come to you in dreams, but the trick is actually remembering them.”<br />

10. THE DEVIL WEARS A SUIT<br />

<strong>Kate</strong> says: “Part of me is reluctant to say who this song is actually about [laughs], but let’s just say it’s a song about the<br />

banality of evil and how often it comes under the veneer of respectability. The opening line of the song ‘End of October /<br />

sun’s fallen over / wolves on the street’ came from when we played a show in Madison Wisconsin on Halloween. It was<br />

www.katemillerheidke.com


freezing cold and there were huge packs of very drunk men in masks roaming the street yelling and breaking bottles. After<br />

the show we were exhausted from all the travel and to get to our hotel room had to carry all our gear through this dense<br />

raucous party in the hotel. It was an eerie night, we were a long way from home and the song started from that strange<br />

place. The song is influenced by Irish folk music, because both Keir and I have always loved Irish music.”<br />

11. FIRE & IRON<br />

<strong>Kate</strong> says: “The closing song is told from the perspective of a dead narrator, watching her childhood boyfriend walk his<br />

children through a park years later. Fire And Iron is the image of a car crash, but it also refers to her being a spirit and him<br />

being material. The two characters are linked throughout the song by smoking. We liked the idea of smoke because it is an<br />

ephemeral element.”<br />

www.katemillerheidke.com

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