Despite the fact that they share a name with the virus casting a dark shadow over 2020, the Ireland-based pop-rock band The Coronas are having quite a year. After 12 years of playing together, they are putting out their sixth studio album True Love Waits on July 31 via So Far So Good Records/ Blix Street Records.
A glossy, no-frills record, True Love Waits captures the power-pop essence of the bandโs songwriting sensibilities. Originally a four-piece group, guitarist Dave McPhillips departed from the band right before they went into the studio for this record. In response, the remaining trio sought to revamp their sound and their energy, bringing in friends and guests to fill out the record sonically and to breathe life into it. As a result, True Love Waits captures a new side of The Coronas.
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Currently, the band is finally rehearsing together again after being separated for several months. Last week after one of their rehearsals, American Songwriter caught up with frontman Danny O’Reilly to discuss the band’s new sound as well as the long journey it took to get this record from conception to release. Traditionally viewed as a โlive bandโ first and foremost, OโReilly has been focusing-in on the meaning and role of music in his life amidst this global pandemic that his band shares a name with.
When did you start working on this record? What inspired it?
We had four songs by around February last year. We decided to go to a studio in Los Angeles with an amazing producer named Rob Kirwan, who worked with U2 and PJ Harvey and Hozierโs two albums. He produced four tracks for us and we released one of those songs. But, then we came back and our guitar player told us that he had been thinking about it for a while and that he wanted to move on. He wasnโt really enjoying it anymore, he wanted to take a break from the band. So, that changed things and shook up what we were going to do. However, it turned out to be a blessing in disguise in a way. Not because Dave left, but because it gave us a new vigor, a new sense of direction. We knew that it was going to sound different without Dave anyway, so we decided to embrace that. We ended up going in a new direction for the album. So, only two of the four songs we recorded in Los Angeles ended up on the record. We wrote and recorded the rest of the album in a couple of months after last summer. Weโre really happy, weโre really proud of it.
After Dave left, we changed our recording technique. Instead of making the band smaller with his departure, we made it bigger. We invited a lot of our friends to collaborate with us. I wrote with a lot of different people. We had several guest guitar players. We have friends doing stuff like singing backing vocals and playing trumpets and stuff like that. It was a really fun process, we enjoyed it a lot.
We were all set to release it and go on a world tour when this thing happened. Then you add on the additional weirdness of the virus name being almost the same as our band name, thatโs a whole different level of strangeness. But, weโre getting on with it. Itโs a strange time for everyone, but weโre really proud of this album and we wanted to put it out there. Our audience was still engaging with us and it seemed like folks were hungry for new music, so we said โyou know what? This album is ready to go, letโs just release it.โ If gigs donโt come back, weโll just start working on the next album. It felt like the right thing to do.
So, this record has gone on quite a journey over the past year and a half โ how has your relationship with it changed in that time?
I think itโs been strange for sure, especially since itโs been finished for a while. We were all set to release it and go on a world tour right when the pandemic hit. In a way, I do look at the songs differentlyโฆ I think I look at everything differently. Music, movies, whatever, thereโs a new perspective now. Thereโs an unnerving, self-questioning attitude to everything now. So, that makes you listen to the music differently. People have been saying that some of the songs sound like they were written in quarantine, theyโre about isolation and stuff. But, we wrote them all last year. Songs sound different depending on whatโs going on in your life and what mood youโre in.
In a way, the experience has reaffirmed the songsโ meanings. Especially since it got delayedโฆ we were a bit unsure how long weโd be waiting around. It definitely means more to us now coming back every day and promoting it. Especially considering how much Iโm enjoying the promotion and the rehearsals. Thereโs definitely a newfound happiness to be releasing music, for sure.
What has it been like to reunite with the band after the past several months apart?
Itโs actually surprisingly cool. I used to not really look forward to rehearsals โ they always felt like pre-season training before the season actually starts. I didnโt dread them or anything, but it was definitely something I took for granted. So, getting back at it this week and seeing the guys felt good. Weโve been together for 12 years and this break has been the longest weโve gone without seeing each other. Itโs strange to think about. So, it was really good to see them and it was really good to play music again. Weโre working up versions of the new songs. Itโs cool to feel like weโre โback to work,โ even though mass-gatherings seem like theyโre still far away, even here where the numbers are doing pretty well.
Does it feel different than it did before?
Well, straight away we went into the studio and everybody was wearing masks and there were constant efforts to make sure that we were all social distancing, so in that way it was interesting. But, once we got into the room we were able to rehearse as normal. Even though we were a little rough โ donโt get me wrong, Iโm not claiming that we sounded great straight away โ it was definitely like โoh wow, this is fun.โ Itโs nice to be able to walk around while playing guitar, even if itโs just because it allows me to pretend that Iโm on stage. It was great to dance a little bit. It felt fresh, but it also felt like we were just picking up where we left off. I guess thatโs the thing about this lockdown; everyoneโs just gone on pause, as opposed to missing things entirely. We decided to release the album at the end of July regardless of what happens, so weโre making the most of it. Weโre playing on.
Do you feel that the experience of releasing this record amidst the pandemic has brought your relationship with music into sharp focus?
I think so, yeah. In the past couple of years, Iโve personally made an effort to acknowledge how much I love this and how lucky I am to call this my job. So, I wouldnโt say that Iโm an ungrateful person or that I took it for granted. Especially if you look at my lyrics from the past couple of years โ Iโm really trying to live in the present and enjoy the journey. But, I have that feeling even more so now. Iโm grateful for everything thatโs happened to us so far, Iโm grateful for this job. I hope that doesn’t change, I hope we donโt have to look into doing other things.
That is a concern. We donโt know when mass-gatherings are going to come back. Over here, it doesn’t look like anything is going to happen this year. Weโre hoping that we can ride it out and get back to it next year. But, the thing about it is: live performances is the thing I enjoy most about being in a band. Anything else just supports that โ even albums. I love recording, I love making our music, I love albums, but Iโm not the kind of person that sees them as a piece of art while touring is meant to promote it. Itโs more that I want to release music because I love being in a live band. Releasing new music supports our live show more than the other way around. Playing live is something that you cannot compare anything to. Hearing a crowd sing your words back to you is an amazing sensation that you just canโt describe. I think thatโs why the live music industry has thrived in the past few years despite the fact that the recording industry has been turned upside down due to streaming. If anything, thereโs a bigger demand. Thereโre more people going to concerts than ever. I think weโre going to be really, really grateful when live music comes back.
So, the elephant in the room is that the name of your band is The Coronas โ what has it been like to share a name with the virus?
Itโs such a strange thing. Initially, the dynamic was different. Early on we got a few WhatsApp messages from fans and friends joking about it, but we couldnโt joke about it because it was such a heavy, scary thing. But, now I think that everyone is aware of whatโs going on in the world, so we can poke a little fun at the similar names. It really just puts an extra level of weirdness on the whole situation. Weโve been called The Coronas for 12 years, so when people asked if we were going to change our name we were like โwell, we already have five albums out, so I donโt think so.โ Itโs one of those things. Someone told me that our Spotify numbers are higher than ever, so who knows, maybe it’s helping in a way. If it gets our music to just a few more people, then I donโt care. Itโs just a name.
The first thing we did when the pandemic hit was tweet at Corona beer asking โwell, whatโs your plan?โ They didnโt respond, but I think our followers got a kick out of it.
Listen to “Light Me Up” by The Coronas below:
