Kieran Leonard | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Born | 1987 (age 35–36) |
Genres | Indie Rock, Folk Rock, Alternative Rock |
Instrument(s) | Vocals, Guitar, Piano |
Years active | 2009-present |
Labels | Fierce Panda Xtra Mile Recordings |
Kieran Leonard, also known as Saint Leonard and Saint Leonard's Horses, is a British musician, songwriter, actor and author. He currently performs most frequently with his backing band The Horses and has previously toured in support of Father John Misty, The Libertines, Bob Dylan, Beck, Nick Cave, Patti Smith, Adam Green & Binki Shapiro, Peter Doherty, The Cribs, Fionn Regan, Jonathan Wilson, Lee Mavers, Billy Bragg, Keane, Babyshambles, Dirty Pretty Things and Wolfmother.
From 2009 to 2015 Leonard wrote and performed under his own name, releasing one album, an EP and four singles. His second album Good Luck Everybody was released in 2016 under the Saint Leonard moniker.
Leonard spent much of his childhood travelling. He has two older brothers, and has never known his father but has a good relationship with his mother. His upbringing has been described as 'unorthodox'. His restless upbringing left an indelible impression, and a sense of displacement and alienation would become one of the central themes of much of his creative work. Leonard has stated in several interviews that he was inspired to write music after watching a David Bowie retrospective at the age of 13, and subsequently wrote 100 songs in the space of six months. In both his work and interviews Leonard often cites writers and world literature as a central influence on his musical output. [1]
In 2009, Leonard recorded his first professional demos at London's Konk Studios. The Scapegoat EP was produced by The Libertines' Carl Barât, and was mixed by Chris Sheldon. The four songs were released as individual tracks timed to coincide with the full moon each month. This unusual release schedule garnered some media attention and led to Leonard being invited to perform on Absolute Radio UK for two of the "Full Moon" release nights. [2]
The following year he recorded and released his debut single 'Jerusalem'. The single was well received both critically and commercially, and appeared in the soundtrack for Ridley Scott's film Life in a Day. 'Jerusalem' was noted for its timely response to the social unrest occurring in London at the time, and for its relevance to the global Occupy movement in particular. [3]
Kieran Leonard's debut album Out of Work Astronaut was recorded largely in a home studio in North London and released in August 2012. It featured the singles 'Harold Pinter is Dead', 'Wooden Man', 'Vampire', and 'Air Raid'. The album garnered generally favourable reviews, being listed as one of BBC London's Albums of the Year, and enabled Leonard to tour UK and Europe several times. [4]
In 2013, Leonard left the UK and moved to California. Citing the collapse of a long-term relationship, he abandoned the gothic church where he had been living on the Moors of North Yorkshire and spontaneously moved to Los Angeles for an indefinite time.
Upon his arrival he was offered a tour of California with Australian rock band Wolfmother. [5] This delayed the commencement of recording by a month, and was the first of a series of unusual and chance occurrences that led to the entire recording session taking almost 10 months. Leonard ended up using several Hollywood studios and producers, however he was ultimately dissatisfied with the extensive LA sessions, despite having been enthused and inspired by the musicians and artists he had met and worked with. He also cites the friendships and experiences he had while there as reason enough for the costly abandoned year of recordings.
In late 2014, Leonard left Los Angeles, briefly returned to London, and then for a short time his whereabouts were totally unknown. He was later found to have taken up residence in a log cabin on the outskirts of Nashville, Tennessee, where he spent several months writing a semi-autobiographical novel. He continued working in isolation until Autumn 2014, ultimately completing a draft of the book alongside an extensive batch of new songs. [6]
In January 2015, Leonard was invited to continue work on his upcoming second album at Stanley Kubrick's family estate in St. Albans, Hertfordshire. [7] The intention cited by Leonard was to record the material he had developed in LA as entirely 'live' as possible, with his band playing together in the same room and even his lead vocals being laid down 'live' with the track. This now quite unusual approach was drawn from his negative experience of digital multi-tracking in LA and also his desire to capture the heightened spontaneity of records such as Bob Dylan's Blonde on Blonde and The Rolling Stones' Exile on Main Street.
Leonard immediately released the single 'Underwood Milk' on Fierce Panda Records [8] from this session and in February embarked on an extensive tour of UK and Europe with his friend Father John Misty. [9]
It was during the Kubrick sessions that Leonard and his band improvised and recorded the fifteen minute long 'The Greatest Show on Earth' in a single take. After its release the song was noted in the music press for its satirical tone and its references to current social and political issues. Figures and corporations referenced in the track include Ai Wei Wei, Edward Snowden, Julian Assange, Amazon, Apple, and Google. [10]
At the end of a busy 2015 full of extensive festival appearances and many London shows, Leonard left the capital once again and maintained sporadic contact with his team in the UK. He eventually surfaced in late December in the Mojave Desert residing in a motel near Joshua Tree, where he was undergoing what he describes as a transcendental mystical experience. After this, he became known as Saint Leonard. He cites the experience of the Kubrick estate and several bizarre episodes in the isolation of the desert as the grounds for this shift in artistic identity.
With the start of 2016, Leonard continued to adapt his musical stylings under his new moniker and started performing with a full band known as The Horses. It was later announced that Leonard had signed to the indie Label Xtra Mile Recordings, with the contract being signed on the grave of William Blake. [11]
Good Luck Everybody was the first work published under the Saint Leonard's Horses banner. It was recorded at Childwickbury Manor in St Albans, the former estate of Stanley Kubrick. The album was released in October 2016 to significant critical acclaim. Mark Beaumont of NME called it "a surrealist, mystical odyssey of self-discovery, maximal hedonism and jaws-of-death revelation". [12] Clash Magazine commented that it was "Weird, wonderful and evocative - a broad, cinematic, engrossing piece of work, rippling with ambition". [13] The album also received praise from GigSoup who included it as one of their top 13 albums of 2016. [14] Tom Doyle from Q magazine gave the album a four star rating, describing it as "top notch stuff that draws comparisons with Neil Young and Father John Misty. [15]
On 2 June 2017, Saint Leonard released 'Little Girl Scientist', the first single from the album. [16] A music video was released on 12 June, directed by Markus Schroder and starring Sophie Kennedy Clark; with Jonathan Meades providing additional narration. [17]
Both 'Little Girl Scientist' and 'Rise Up' garnered strong support from BBC 6 Music upon their release, with presenter Tom Robinson describing the album as 'Brilliant, adventurous music from an extraordinarily talented artist'. [18] On December 23 2017, Leonard joined Robinson in the 6 Music studio for a two hour session where the host played the majority of the album. [19]
In 2017, Leonard travelled to Rishikesh, India to visit Beatles Ashram, where he spent several weeks writing material for his third album. [20] He then travelled to the Devi temple located at Kasar Devi. [21] The site is a famous Hindu shrine which sits high at an altitude of 2,116 ft in the Himalayas. Here, Leonard studied transcendental meditation and Hindu philosophy with monks and teachers at the shrine. [22] He stayed in the Nepalese hotel on Crank's Ridge known for the extended stays of Bob Dylan, George Harrison and Timothy Leary. [23] [24]
In 2018, Leonard began collaborating with guitarist Joshua Hayward of the Horrors, alongside Bassist Panda from TOY and former Klaxons member Steffan Halperin rejoining on drums. [25] [26]
Leonard started recording material for what was to become the basis of his upcoming third record at Paul Epworth's The Church Studios in Crouch End. [27] Of the 11 or so songs recorded in this session 'Light Years' was selected as a single and released in May 2019. [28]
The single was received to very favourable reviews with NME declaring 'The result is a psych-rock cracker that sounds like the great lost collaboration between Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, The Spiders From Mars and Sunn 0))), drifting by in a giddy swirl of surreal visions, H. G. Wells references (“he knows what sells”), inappropriate behaviour at major tourist landmarks (“I undress you on The Bridge of Sighs”) and space-age philosophies. “I’m an existentialist with an Oxycontin kiss,” Leonard wails at the chorus. We bet he is. ‘Light Years’: ahead of the game.' [29]
The Music video released for 'Light Years' is a single shot of Leonard performing the song live in Abbey Road Studios 'Studio One' on a piano originally used by The Beatles. [30] To mark the release date of the show Saint Leonard performed a headline show at 'Electrowerkz' London. [31]
In June, another track taken from the church album sessions titled 'Dark Miracles' was released, accompanied by a notably avant garde music video featuring the Korean visual artist Seulgi Lee Kang. [32] [33]
In June 2019, Leonard was invited to play the inaugural return of the legendary Club NME hosted at the Moth Club in Hackney, London. [34] He was billed to headline alongside "a very special guest". [35] Shortly before the event it was rumoured that the special guest was in fact Dave Grohl (Foo Fighters, Nirvana). [36]
On the night, Leonard performed an hour-long set, with Grohl joining Leonard in performing a stripped-down set alongside members of the Foo Fighters and Rick Astley. [37]
In March 2020, during the first national lockdown due to the COVID-19 pandemic in the United Kingdom, Leonard commenced a sequence of 'Live Transmission Gigs' from his living room in Highgate, London. [38] The shows were live streamed weekly in association with Clash Magazine to a nightly online audience of roughly 250k viewers via the CLASH Magazine instagram and website platform. [39] He was joined each week by a special guest. These included musician Josh T Pearson live from Texas and Jonathan Meades in Marseille. Each week, Leonard sent out 'Lockdown Letters' to any viewers who signed up; these letters often included golden tickets for a special free concert after the pandemic as well a free bottle of Black Tot Rum. [40]
In September 2020, Leonard relocated to the relatively re-opened Berlin, Germany to continue work on his third album. [41] He initially moved to an apartment in the Neukolln district. Leonard quickly became involved in the Berlin art scene and was invited to read from his forthcoming novel 'A Muse' at the Neurotitan Gallery. Other contributors to this event included Irish author Rob Doyle and poet Kirsty Allison. [42] [43] It was at this reading that Leonard was introduced to Nathan Saoudi and Alex White, members of the band Fat White Family. [44] They subsequently began collaborating on new material for Leonard's rebooted third record, also revisiting some of the pre-existing material from The Church Studios recording sessions. The trio then went into Klangbild Studios in Friedrichshain. Leonard is cited as saying that the collaboration worked 'like a preordained happening' with 6 songs being written and recorded in under two weeks. [45]
The third album, as yet unnamed, is scheduled for release in Late 2021. [46]
Leonard also stated that editing work on his novel 'A Muse' was completed in the winter of 2020 while he was living in Neukoln. [47]
In July 2021, Leonard released a single titled 'Always Night'. This track was premiered via "Tim's Twitter Listening Party", a digital music programme hosted by Tim Burgess, vocalist for The Charlatans [48]
Leonard also had a brief acting career in the mid 2000s, appearing in the BBC TV series Casualty and Hustle. [49]
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