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Women In Music Series Part 1: An Interview with an Inspirational Young Artist - Claudia Vega

Photo: Claudia Vega and her band playing live on board Tamesis Dock, London 6/3/18
Hello and welcome back to the Vinyl Loving Luddites blog! Katie and I have been away for a while but we are back with a bang - in this post we interview the wonderfully talented Claudia Vega. Claudia is an artist to watch out for and is one of the leading lights on the burgeoning Spanish music scene along with the likes of Hinds, Los Nastys and The Parrots. Claudia is hoping to release her debut album very soon but for now she has a number of songs available online, most notably the emotional âMomâ and recent single âAll of My Freedomâ - check out the beautiful video here.....
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Katie and I first saw Claudia supporting Hinds at the Sebright Arms in London on 29th January 2018 and we were both enrapt by her performance. We saw her again on Tamesis Dock in March and a couple of weeks before that in February we got a chance to chat with her about her influences, her writing, her views on women in music, social media and much much more.....

Photo:Â Claudia at Sebright Arms, London 29th January 2018
Claudia on her creative processâŠ
 Dan: Hello there, Claudia! Welcome to the Vinyl Loving Luddites!Â
Claudia: Hello!
Katie: Thank you so much for being with us today! First question: who was your biggest artistic influence growing up?
Claudia: I mean, itâs a very easy question because I was such a Bob Dylan fan. I knew all of his songs by heart, even though I didnât understand the lyrics. Thatâs also how I kind of started to learn English. As soon as I heard him I was very much into him. Neil Young, James Taylor, Carole King, Karen Dalton, and some Spanish music as well. Flamenco is crucial in my development as a musician, although that came later. But yeah, I would say that the biggest, biggest influence was Bob Dylan. The importance he gave to the lyrics it really resonated with the kind of music I wanted to make. It felt like I could relate to him, in so many senses. I would have to say him. Later, I started listening to a lot more music, so I have plenty of influences, itâs really hard to say but Bob Dylan remains the most important.
Katie: We could hear that in your gig last week (Sebright Arms, Hackney London), just the chord changes...
Dan: Just the style, absolutely...
Claudia: He really helped me, I also really like literature and poetry, I read quite a lot, so to see Bob Dylan integrate such complex imagery into his music so naturally, that really resonated with me.
Dan: Itâs a very interesting era that, as well, all the creativity in the 60âs and the early 70âs, like you mentioned with Neil Young, so much was happening at that time.
Claudia: Absolutely. For me, I felt the need to search for new ways of communicating my emotions. I did this in a very visceral way, I just really wanted to say the things that I had to say. And all those musicians didnât just say them but claimed them - thatâs what I wanted. From there, I started to develop my own kind of music.
Katie: I noticed that with your song about your mum, (âMomâ), that itâs so visceral, so from the heart and unadulterated, like thereâs nothing sugar coated. I also love how you write with different languages. I noticed some French in there, some Spanish and English, and those very bared emotions: I feel like youâre carving out your own space and style.
Claudia: Yeah, I write many songs crying. At least five of my songs, I wrote them crying and it takes me sometimes hours of just singing and crying with my guitar. I feel like if I canât feel the song, I canât make people feel. So sometimes I have to wait a lot, itâs not like songs happen. I mean, sometimes, yeah, but other times you need to work hard in order to find the song. Sometimes itâs like youâre waiting and suddenly itâs like things come together and you start feeling the song really deeply- it may not lead to a great song, but itâs the most magical experience. Or, you can be really feeling a sentence, and from that sentence you develop the whole song. The fact that I write in three languages is mainly because my life happens in three languages. Like, I donât speak any language very well...Â
Katie: Your English is better than my English...Â
Claudia: Well, with my boyfriend I speak in French because Iâve always studied in French and Iâve grown surrounded by French culture. Also, my family is Moroccan so they all speak French, like we always mix French and Spanish. With my parents, my brother, I speak in Spanish. And Iâve been living here (the UK) for four years, so with my friends, the music I listen to, everything is in English. So, it just feels more honest singing in three languages- if it wasnât more honest, I wouldnât do it. But I feel like, the things that I want to talk about happen in different languages, so if I want to convey the meaning fully, then it has to be in different languages. Sometimes not, sometimes itâs just English because sometimes itâs easier to write in English and it comes lightly and thatâs sometimes what I need.Â
Claudia on her emotional processâŠ
 Katie: It seems like your process can sometimes be very frustrating when youâre like âCome on! I want to write a song this side of Christmasâ but then it also seems very therapeutic. Would you say itâs a purging of emotions for you?
Claudia: I think at the beginning, for sure. When I started it was about getting out what I had inside, but right now...itâs a more delicate process than just a cathartic purge of emotions. That doesnât mean that I donât put a big input of emotion into the songs, itâs just that it becomes more about the story behind and that makes that I am able to speak about a lot more things. Itâs not only introspective anymore, which I like better. I feel like I have more control now. The lyrics, for instance, can be more interesting, I put more thought into them. How I write now, is definitely better than before. But I still have that kind of... (laughs) writing, I donât know why, it just breaks me, it just breaks me into tears, I donât know why!
Dan: So I get the impression that the lyrics come to you first and the music afterwards, am I right?
Claudia: Well, I donât think Iâm a very good writer if I have no music to write upon. I think itâs a very different thing to write upon silence. When youâre confronted to a blank page, you know, you can feel lonely⊠but when you write upon music, itâs like thereâs someone accompanying you all throughout the process. Youâre generally talking about yourself when you write, so having music is like having another person speaking to you. I wouldnât be able to write without the music, so I feel like it comes together. But for sure, if I donât have good lyrics, I donât like the song. I think I have less of an ear for the musical structure, whereas for the lyrics and the melodic structure I feel more comfortable. I think itâs important to think about the lyrics, they are enriching, they have so much power.
Claudia on Aha momentsâŠ
Dan: Wow, you know your process so well. The next question is, did you ever have an âaha!â moment that made you want to become a professional musician?
Claudia: For sure, for sure... I remember that when I started uni, in the back of my mind I thought âyou can always be a musicianâ, which is strange because people think âI want to be a musician, but Iâll do uni first as a sort of securityâ. I think for me it was more like I liked (and still do) so many things, but my security was music. I think about how I want to be a musician every second of my life so...I just didnât have any doubts. Like art in general, but music was always like...my thing.
Katie: So what did you study, out of interest?
Claudia: Arts and sciences. Itâs an interdisciplinary degree, where you choose a major and a minor, itâs great because you can choose every single module, itâs a lot more organic, youâre interests as a person change and your degree adapts to that. No two people study the same. I would recommend that degree to everyone.
Dan: Wow, thatâs amazing that you can choose all the way throughâŠ
Katie: Which uni was that at?
Claudia: UCL.
Katie: Wow! I donât think I wouldâve gotten into UCL in the first place!
Claudia: I have no idea of how I got in, either!
Dan: It was my first choice and I missed the grade by one mark, so I went to Westminster uni and did law there, right round the corner...but well done you!
Claudia: I managed to fake it, I donât know how! I didnât even speak English.
Katie: Thatâs so cool! But itâs so interesting that music was your security firstâŠ
Claudia: Well I didnât even sing well. I mean, I sang really, really badly. I had a terrible ear (I still do). But I had a sense that I could write music, even more than being a good musician, or something, it was about the writing process, or the composition process. I had a sense that, I could do that very naturally. You know when have a sense for something? It just felt like that for me.
Katie: So, from when you were a teenager?
Claudia: Yeah, since I was twelve.
Katie: Wow, so that was your âahaâ moment; as wellâŠ
Claudia: I fought for my guitar so much, I was asking to my parents every day for a guitar and because I wasnât good at piano, they were like âno guitars in this houseâ and then eventually I got it and everything started from there.

 Photo: Claudia at Sebright Arms, London 29th January 2018
Claudia on HindsâŠ
Dan: So when you were younger, did Ana (from Hinds) goad you on? You mentioned you were friends growing upâŠ
Claudia: We met in a theatre group, we did drama together...our stories were similar growing up. I mean, sheâs a little older than me, so I was like her little sister⊠and now sheâs much more than my friend, sheâs really my sister. It wasnât like she was goading me towards music, I already wrote music when Hinds started. I like being an aspect of her life that isnât very closely related to Hinds; we are a safe space for each other. That also makes it more beautiful whenever our paths musically cross, because itâs more special, and we can have perspective on each otherâs work. When she started with Hinds, I was her biggest fan! But itâs as if she starts anything else in her life, I will always be her biggest fan because I just feel I understand where sheâs going and she understands where I am. Itâs just about trusting everything sheâll do will be worth it. I think itâs the same from her side. I wanted to do music but just independently from everything, and when she started with Hinds, of course, I saw that it was possible and they are, of course, such a big inspiration...that you can actually make it, even if you are from Spain. I will be inspired by anything she does at any point in her life.
Katie: You mentioned before we started the tape, the director Pedro Almodovar and the movement, Iâm going to pronounce it wrong, La Movida, and about that being a big explosion of activity, how would you say that inspired you?
Claudia: I think everybody that is into music, especially rock music in Spain, is in a way inspired by La Movida because it was after the dictatorship of Franco. Many bands and just creative moves started to emerge in Madrid. I think it was a liberating time, fighting for freedom and finding new means of expression. I think interesting musical forms and bands were created at that time and my uncles were one of the most emblematic bands of the movement. I really grew up in a musical environment. My parents love music and they got to meet so many musicians as teenagers, itâs crazy: Graham Parker, Nick Lowe, Ian Dury, The Ramones, Brian Ferry, Jam, Flaming Groovies etc. and of course they introduced me to their music since very early on. My mum is a photographer, she took many pictures of that time and she has just published a book of unreleased pictures of Nacha Pop (my unclesâ band) and theyâre amazing! Sheâs also taken most of my pictures, shot with me my music videos, etc.
Dan: Those bands back then, a lot of the music doesnât sound dated at all. You can see today, that people are digging for inspiration...which is really interesting. I think our parentsâ generation didnât have that much to go back on, but for us thereâs so much more.
Claudia: I mean, weâre so lucky now that we can access so much music, itâs just so easy, so I feel like itâs ingrained in us, in everyone, right? Everyone that has liked music since an early age has in a way fed from those bands.
 Claudia on scenesâŠ
Katie: Actually, one of the questions is, and I might skip to it just because it fits in with this, but the question of scenes, and how do you find the London scene? It gets mixed reviews! Iâll hand it over!
Claudia: For me, I find that itâs so big, that itâs almost impossible for me to have a sense of what the London scene is. I go to so many gigs in London, World music, rock bands,... Itâs incredible, itâs, no doubt one of the best things of my time London, being able to go to all those gigs. At the same time, I miss having a sense of what is going on, I always feel like Iâm missing out. I donât know if we can speak of a scene, maybe there is one and I just donât know about it! But sometimes you can get lost in the amount of different music there is. Itâs fantastic, you get to see different things and it encourages new musical forms and emerging musicians. I think every country should respect music as much as the UK; including Spain! If you donât have an LP out, in Spain, itâs really hard to play gigs, or simply to get help from promoters. Here, I remember, the day I decided I wanted to play a gig, I played a gig.
Katie: I think the pace can change quite quickly in London, so if you know a little group or a certain cohort of people thatâs great, but as a musician, if you duck out of the scene for a couple of years, you can come back and theyâve all moved on. For me, London recycles itself quite quickly, thatâs why I was interested to ask the questionâŠ
 Claudia on women in musicâŠ
Dan: This is one weâre both really interested in: how do you see the music industry changing in terms of its approach to women?
Claudia: I donât think I am part of the music industry, at least not yet. I am unsigned, I donât feel like I can speak about the industry much. But Iâve seen it a lot with Hinds and with a lot of female musicians. One thing I get a lot after the gigs, I donât know why, is the question: âwho writes the songs?â, everyone thinks women are not able to write music. We are able to perform, we are able to sing; but the music, we have to sing the music that guys write for us. And to that question I really wonder: âhave you listened for a second to my lyrics? Because theyâre extremely personal, like itâs impossible to ask me that question! No man in the world could write the lyrics that Iâve writtenâ. The way women are introduced into the music industry is sexist in itself, everything is. I think women need to stay true to themselves, do whatever the fuck they want to do, because otherwise nothing will change⊠There are so many ideals of femininity imposed on women: either being too feminine is not being a feminist, or being non-feminine, is not being a new-wave feminist and when you are on stage you are more vulnerable to that. I think women should make as much music as possible, find our own language, one that does not copy a long tradition of man-made discourse, but one that truly speaks to us. It took me a lot to consider that I could write music being a woman. I was always a groupie of my boyfriends; even though, I played better and spent a lot more time writing songs, but I was always on the other side of the stage. I know so many women and teenagers that have a lot to say; I think everyone should have the same opportunity to express themselves.Â
Katie: Amen, amen! It pisses me off so much! I repeat, it pisses me off.Â
Dan: It pisses us all off!Â
Katie: Like, I would play a gig and a guy would come up to me in all sincerity and say âdo you know what, youâre great! You can sing and play at the same time!â Because most women can either sing, or they need a guy to play the guitar for them. Or theyâd say âwhoâs song was that?â and Iâd say âmy songâ. But they actually think theyâre complimenting you, and Iâm like, are you on meth? What are you smoking? How can my ovaries get in the way of these strings? It pisses me off because itâs a space, isnât it. Itâs a masculine space. Danâs exempt because heâs a feminist, but itâs like manspreading on a train, but with music and art. If my ovaries donât stop me playing the cello, or if they donât stop me playing piano then why would they stop me playing in bands? What pisses me off the most is that the rationale doesnât need to have a rationale. It doesnât need to be rational because thatâs just the status quo.Â
Claudia: Yeah, yeah. But itâs a different way of writing music, like women have different rhythms, we just create different music, imagine how enriching it would be to finally listen to all the voices that have been silenced. I want every woman that is making music now to be listened...itâs just going to be so enriching! Itâs gonna be great!Â
Katie: Weâre gonna take over!Â
Dan: Itâs interesting to me, as I think most of the bands which we tend to like are either female-fronted or female singers, and itâs the fact that, very much with Hinds as well, like âhere we are! Weâre gonna play our music, we are who we areâ and thatâs how everybody should be, whether theyâre a guy or a girl, really, at the end of the day. But Iâve seen a lot more female artists come through from electronic music recently, like Shura, Kelly Lee Owens, so hopefully weâll see more female fronted bands.Â
Katie: Well yeah, I love how new movements are coming about. Like a few weeks ago, we saw you support Hinds at the Sebright Arms, and a few months before that, we saw the band Dream Nails at the Dalston Victoria, who are linked with Sisters Uncut, the political movement to end the Tory governmentâs ruthless cuts to womenâs services, so it feel like at the moment, with all this bullshit in the world, there are pockets of resistance sprouting, so it should be a really exciting time to be a woman in music.Â
Claudia: We can totally point out the bullshit, itâs so visible. I mean, I mentioned so many male influences when I was growing up, but I feel like now, most of the bands I listen to are female, or female fronted. Â Â
Katie: This is our one year anniversary of seeing Tegan and Sara! They played the Roundhouse this day today last year, Galentineâs dayâŠÂ
Claudia: I love how you guys keep track of your gigs! You are like, âitâs been ten days since we saw HindsâÂ
Katie: Seriously, we have the same brain. I think weâre a little bit on the spectrum, arenât we?Â
Dan: Yeah, yeah.Â

Photo: Claudia on board Tamesis Dock, London 6th March 2018
Claudia on multi-lingual artistsâŠÂ
Katie: We love it. You mentioned that thereâs so much to go and see...but is there something that youâre excited for? Your gigs, or anyone elseâs?Â
Claudia: Iâm going to see Ibeyi at the end of the month, they are incredible. They are twins, half Cuban, half French and they sing in Yoruba, Spanish and English, and theyâre amazing. And then, well I have a couple of gigs: on the 6th March I am playing on a boat! Iâm so excited! You canât imagine! Â
Katie: Thatâs very cool! How are your sea legs?Â
Claudia: I throw up as soon as I get on a boat (laughs)! But I think itâs steady⊠Iâm really excited for that gig because Iâm playing with my band, which is, well, I usually play alone. When I play in Spain, I always play alone, but this gig is in London so theyâre here! I also havenât played in London for a while, so Iâm really, really excited.Â
Dan: Wow, weâll come along! Â
Katie: My sea legs are rubbish, but Iâll make sure I stand close to the side.Â
Dan: Yeah! The next question is, if you could go back in time and give your fifteen year old self some advice, what would it be?Â
Claudia: I guess it would have to be about how... you can actually make it. Big plans always feel too ambitious, but I think the biggest they sound the more you should go for it, because you will, for sure, learn more on the way than expected. Everyone scares us, saying itâs too risky, but then we never learn about ourselves if we donât take risks. Katie: Thatâs brilliant advice. Claudia: I think, just trusting and staying true, which is really hard sometimes. Listening to yourself and not getting bombarded by so much information or jealousy, wanting to be someone else, or wanting to be things that youâre not. You should always stay true to yourself and make the most of it because then youâre going to be truly happy. Also playing music a lot, because itâs a really good feeling. Like, thank God it exists! Music is the best thing in the world. Listening to a lot of music, just absorbing, listening to other people. Stealing from other peopleâs point of view (laughs)! Â
Katie: âSteal Like an Artistâ, by Austin KleonÂ
Claudia: I think Picasso said something like thatâŠÂ
Claudia on developing self-trustâŠÂ
Katie: Whatâs your top tip to keep on trusting yourself? Because self-doubt⊠everyone has it, but particularly artists. The little angel on one shoulder and the devil on the other. Do you have a top tip on how to not listen to the doubts?
Claudia: I listen to my doubts so much (laughs)! I always do, like one moment I feel great and empowered about my music (like when Iâm on stage); but then all of a sudden I break. Especially because I do everything alone: I play alone, I write alone, so, you just keep going. I doubt myself a lot: I always angrily ask myself: âwhy do you think you are different?â. On stage I generally feel great: I love it, Iâm very receptive to the audience, even if itâs a small gig I like bringing the people close to me and I feel like speak truly when Iâm on stage, so when it comes out of my mouth, I donât doubt it. Iâm happy and I trust what I do. Â
Dan: I think we got that impression very much so when we saw you at the Sebright a few weeks ago, you very much drew us in and really playing close attention to the lyrics and the sound and the vibe.Â
Claudia: I could see your faces so clearly!Â
Katie: Your music was so beautiful and so captivating! It was kind of like a massage! A massage for the soul, like when youâre a kid and thereâs someone tracing shapes on your back in assembly and you just drift offâŠÂ
Dan: Thatâs just the power of music, which has amazed me since I was very little, it could be any genre and something will hit you and you donât necessarily know why but you want to listen to these songs again and again and again, because they give you comfort, or they give you inspiration, or help you relax, or empower you. You can hear whatâs influencing them and you go on a musical journey, as well.Â
Katie: We went on a musical journey as well...weâre really lucky, because we always get there early because weâre always coming from work, so we always see the support. Like the other week when we saw you at the Sebright â one of the things that really surprised me was that all the acts were really thanking us, for being there! But I was like, âdo you guys realise that these tickets are the hottest tickets?â Everyone that didnât get one is really pissed off! You donât have to thank us, we have to thank you! Itâs an interesting dynamicâŠÂ Â
Claudia: But I think a very important part of being an artist is to be thankful. Without you guys, things donât happen, you also give it more meaning â audiences make you discover a lot more about your music. Itâs as important to have people supporting music as to have people creating. I think you should be thanked individually, for going to the gigs, for listening to music in your house. To see yourself reflected in someone else is the biggest thing you can imagine.Â
Claudia on social mediaâŠÂ
Dan: Iâve got a question which isnât on the list but which kind of links into it â one of the ways over the last few years which Iâve connected with artists is definitely through social media, and the fact that you have that relationship between the artist and the fan-base, I feel you can interact, itâs like âyeah, Iâm really connecting with you guys as wellâ. From the artistâs point of view, how does this seem to you?Â
Claudia: Thatâs a good question â I feel really connected to many people that follow me on social media, I donât have many followers but I get a lot of feedback and messages! I get many opportunities from social media as well. Photographers, or just people coming to the gigs. Social media can be very dangerous and absorb you. You compare yourself all the time and very easily; but itâs just a number and then itâs like, âoh my God, Iâm so small compared to this other person that plays the guitar!â But at the same, itâs great because you can connect with so many people, itâs like with you! If I hadnât met you at the gig, you lose contact, you know? I think itâs important to keep it as a safe space, and just to keep people informed of what youâre doing â if they follow you, you should give something in exchange. And I think thatâs valuable.Â
Katie: Like we say, Dan and I are âLudditesâ, as in we only like vinyl and things that have got one button, and itâs really interesting for us having been to uni in the 90âs/early Noughties ~showing our age a bit, here~ but you didnât even use a computer for your essays, you could type them if you wanted, but you handed them in, and I remember the introduction of facebook, then I remember Myspace, and then that died, then everything else sort ofâŠÂ
Dan: Twitter, InstagramâŠÂ
Katie: Yeah, and I nearly just said âmy generationâ which makes me sound like such an old woman, but people who are pre-Millenial, people like me, a part of me really struggled! I remember when Twitter first came out & I was like âahhh man! Whatâs this? Why do I need one of these?âÂ
Claudia: Itâs crazy, no? To think about it when you havenât grown up with itâŠÂ
Katie: Exactly, and all my friends who were about ten years younger than me were saying, âwell, thatâs where people will expect to find you! You have to have that, and you have to have a facebook page and invite people to like youâ, and I felt a bit uncomfortable. I donât mind if people like it of their own accord, thatâs cool! And I donât know if itâs something about our generation or what, but asking for stuff? I was dying a bit inside my soul...but then itâs really important for promotionâŠÂ
Claudia: It does really feel you donât exist if you donât have it. Youâve got to keep it going, like all the time.
Dan: Itâs really interesting as well, because I can see a lot of the artists that are a little bit older than us now, like Nerina Pallot, have a love-hate relationship with social media, but quite often she comes on sheâs really interactive. Also, the guy from XTC, Andy Partridge, I tweeted that Iâd watched this really interesting documentary and that I was getting into his music now on vinyl, listening in order, and he said âCheers Daniel, thanks for that! I hope you enjoy the journey!â So itâs really nice that even people who are much older, in some cases like our parentsâ age are getting into it now.
Claudia: Yeah! Everyone is on some kind of social media now, itâs crazy.
 Claudia on starting outâŠ
 Dan: This is kind of linking back to the previous question as well â what advice would you give to someone starting out now?
Claudia: I think itâs so hard that you need to be obsessed with it! It takes a lot of work and interest in music, but also knowing the environment...the times youâre living in. You can be very successful not being a great musician. There are many examples of incredibly successful musicians who arenât great musicians, but they just know the people...they know the times they are living in. I think you should just be aware that sometimes itâs not that beautiful. Sometimes you just like music and you just like making music because you love music, and that can be ruined when it becomes an obligation. You just need to want to do it, despite the risk of losing a part of the magic, for gaining magic in another sense.
Katie: Magic exchange! It seems like in the 90âs it was completely different, you needed to have an A&R person, you needed to do so many gigs as a support act. Now itâs so much more digital and you also need to know how to market yourself, so...you kind of need to be an expert in branding, as wellâŠwhich for me is a little frightening, but thatâs okay...
Claudia: Totally, you need to be an expert in marketing.
 Claudia on the big questionsâŠ
 Dan: So, weâve got two more questions for you now, so no biggie, but whatâs the key to conquering the world? What needs to change right now?
Claudia: I think itâs not wanting to conquer the world; most approaches to leadership are completely bullshit from my point of view. Itâs about finding your own path, not doing what everyone does. I think itâs more interesting to conquer your world, than the world..., itâs a lot more real, just harder ;) You need to fight for your own truth.
Katie: I guess if you create your own path, you can decide on the limits of it. You can dictate the pace⊠And how to cure the world, as well, which I didnât write down because I thought âNo, thatâs too big!â
Dan: But at the same time, I think the state of the world sparks a lot of creativity as well...All this really bad stuff happens, but at the same time people are doing their own thing in order to go against the status quo of whatâs happening at the moment, trying to find a way forward for the future, and thatâs reflected in the music...and it kind of comes back to that post-punk scene, of late Seventies/early Eighties, of people trying to find their way out to rebel against what was going on...and finding your own space to do your own thing. Thatâs reflected in bands like Hinds as well: âthis is us â take us as we are, this is what we want to doâ. So itâs interesting to see how, not necessarily the music industry, but bands and artists are reflecting thatâŠ
Claudia: Yeah, I think itâs also important that bands that arenât English-speaking bands feel like they can conquer a sort of music scene. There is a lot of people in the world doing incredible things in other languages. So I think there should be a shift, as well, in that sense.
Katie: I feel like since Iâve discovered Spanish-speaking bands, I feel itâs shifting already, but maybe thatâs just my little bubble of LondonâŠand itâs such a welcome change because honestly, English has such a monopoly, and thatâs such a shame that it dominates the mainstream, and that so many people are told to compromise and sing in English and I think itâs really powerful when they donât.
Claudia: If itâs shifting for you then that means something. Iâm going to see a band that sing in Yoruba which is a religion in Cuba, that derives from a religion in Nigeria and it takes many shapes in South America, and itâs a very ancient language and it sounds beautiful. It sounds really beautiful.
 Claudia on ambition & pressing to red vinylâŠ
 Katie: I should have put this as the main ambition, do you just want to keep going for the moment or do you have a plan like, âin ten yearsâ time, I want to have achieved X,Y or Zâ?
Claudia: I want to be able to write music forever. I want to keep evolving as a musician, as much as I can. I want to go as far as possible, but for now, I really want to release the album Iâve recorded because itâs beautiful, so I think thatâs going to be a big stepping stoneâŠbecause I just have one song released, and itâs already taken me pretty far.
Katie: Wow! Will there be an album launch party?
Claudia: For sure! Always a party! For everything a party! Iâll invite everyone!
Dan: Itâs so exciting, to hear all of this, itâs like youâre on the cusp of releasing all this music and you appear super excited, even from your gig at the Sebright, we were entranced by your music, so count us inâŠ
Katie: Do you want to press to vinyl?
Claudia: Of course! And have a colour!
Katie: Do we get to know?
Claudia: A nice red.
Katie: We love a bit of red vinyl...itâs all about the vinyl now. Do you love vinyl yourself?
Claudia: I love vinyl!
Dan: Whatâs your favourite one from your collection?
 Claudia on her favourite vinylâŠ
Claudia: Well, I have âOn the Beachâ by Neil Young, which is a really hard one to get, I struggled a lot to get that one, and I have many, many oldies that I have been getting in Spain and in London. London is such a treasure trove.
Katie: I love it when you land one! My favourite one is David Bowieâs âThe Man Who Sold the Worldâ, I managed to find that and I was like âwoooooahââŠall your Christmases or something. How about you, Dan? Whatâs your favourite?
Dan: Thatâs a pretty tricky question! Yeah...I find it quite hard to pick one, umâŠ
Katie: Sorry, I put you on the spot! Youâd need another glass of wineâŠ
Dan: I mean, that XTC one âEnglish Settlementâ, I was looking for the original but I could only find the reissue and then I found it in Sister Ray back in November. And I really love Joni Mitchellâs âHejiraâ album is one of my favourites...I love the artwork. Iâve had to buy more storage at the moment. I love discovering old stuff and new stuff at the same time.
Claudia: Iâll send you guys mine when I get it!
Dan: Thank you so much!
Katie: Cheers! Thatâs awesome and thatâs a wrap! Thank you so much.
Claudia: Youâre welcome, thank you for your interest!

Wow - what an amazing talent! We hope you enjoyed reading this as much as we enjoyed interviewing Claudia - and please check out her music! https://claudiavegamusic.bandcamp.com
#claudiavega#spanishmusicscene#sebright arms#tamesisdock#hinds#postpunk#lamovida#allofmyfreedom#vinyllovingluddites#bobdylan#feminism#womeninmusic#losnastys#theparrots
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Yeah...We've got a double date in LONDON đŹđ§ in October with My band @karmacreepmusic ______________________________________________________ â· 13/10: @thefiddlerselbownw5 on stage at 7:50 pm. ______________________________________________________ â· 14/10: @tamesisdock on stage at 7:00 pm. ââââââââââââââââââââââââ Info in BIO đ www.facebook.com/KarmaCreepMusic ââââââââââââââââââââââââ#london #uk #karmacreep #band #bandmusic #musicians #music #photooftheday #underground #singer #october #bandrock #thames #westminster #londonmusic #tamesisdock #tamesisriver #fiddlerselbowcamden (presso London, United Kingdom) https://www.instagram.com/p/B0THRcAC96f/?igshid=coths6egag5q
#london#uk#karmacreep#band#bandmusic#musicians#music#photooftheday#underground#singer#october#bandrock#thames#westminster#londonmusic#tamesisdock#tamesisriver#fiddlerselbowcamden
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Iâll take a pint of Happiness to avoid Real Life pleaseeeeeeee, grazie mille!
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#drinkresponsibly
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#london #Vauxhall #Tamesisdock #drinkout #southbank #drinksonthethames #summervibes #summer2021 #southwestlondon #london_only #cityshots #snapshoot #londonforall #shutup_london #londres #funny #londontown #mysecretlondon #londoncreatives #londonbylondoners #londonliving #toplondonphoto #lovelondon #pigeontalks #londongram #londonblogger #londonlifestyle #londra
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Tomorrow is the day...The greatest Sunday evening of Tech House and Deep House is on @tamesisdock from 5PM and Free Entrance!!! #techhouseevents #techhouse #deephouse #housemusic #djset #djbars #dj #producer #londonevents #londonclubevents #londonhousemusic #tamesisdock #londonhousemusicevents
#londonhousemusicevents#techhouse#housemusic#producer#djbars#djset#londonhousemusic#techhouseevents#dj#deephouse#londonclubevents#tamesisdock#londonevents
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This is glorious news! On March 22 me & my Juha crew will be performing with @worldharmonyorchestra on the Tamesis Dock âfloating neighbourhood bar and bargeâ in a benefit for @crisis_uk ... World Harmony Orchestra is an orchestra of migrants from around the globe; Crisis is a charity for homeless folks. Weâll be doing two songs accompanied by orchestra, with performances by the Beelievers, Biram Seck, Jonny Velon, the Portraits, and orchestra founder Romain Malan. Come rock the boat! #RockTheBoat #EveryStepYouTakeIsAMigration #JuhaSayMigration #worldharmony #crisis #crisisuk #endhomelessness @tamesisdock #orchestra #worldmusic (at Tamesis Dock) https://www.instagram.com/p/B81tn8mjt1y/?igshid=18rm72szzu9c8
#rocktheboat#everystepyoutakeisamigration#juhasaymigration#worldharmony#crisis#crisisuk#endhomelessness#orchestra#worldmusic
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Belated birthday drinks #friends #besties #drinks #birthday #london #Westminster #parliament #bigben #thames #tamesisdock (at Tamesis Dock)
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Tamesis Dock.Â
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âSAVE THE DATE | October 14â _______________________________________________________ Yeah...We've got a double date in London đŹđ§ Catch us at @tamesisdock on stage at 7:00 pm. Hope to see you there! _______________________________________________________â· FREE ENTRY â ââââââââââââââââââââââââ Info in BIO đ www.facebook.com/KarmaCreepMusic âïž ââââââââââââââââââââââââ #london #uk #karmacreep #band #bandmusic #musicians #music #photooftheday #underground #singer #october #bandrock #thames #westminster #londonmusic #tamesisdock #tamesisriver (presso Tamesis Dock) https://www.instagram.com/p/B0BjNP1i_ye/?igshid=1m2juxny3lwfj
#london#uk#karmacreep#band#bandmusic#musicians#music#photooftheday#underground#singer#october#bandrock#thames#westminster#londonmusic#tamesisdock#tamesisriver
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The Underground Sessions!!! Was great yesterday @tamesisdock Thank you all for coming! #techhouse #housemusic #deephouse #djbars #djset #dj #producers #londonhousemusic #londonđŹđ§ #techno #londonhousemusicevents
#londonhousemusicevents#housemusic#producers#techno#djset#techhouse#djbars#londonhousemusic#deephouse#dj#londonđŹđ§
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Inizia il Countdown âł đ "THE SPACE TOUR" đŹđ§đŁ @karmacreepmusic â 12/10 @theitalianjobpub â 13/10 @thefiddlerselbownw5 â 14/10 @tamesisdock #TourUK #London #KarmaCreep #musicians #tournĂ©e #thespacetour #photooftheday #music #rockband (presso London, United Kingdom) https://www.instagram.com/p/B3T1opBAEoL/?igshid=aglllr6wb463
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This Sunday I am back @tamesisdock for a great evening of Deep-house House and Tech House!!! #deephouse #techhouse #techhouseevents #dj #djbars #djset #london #londonevents #housemusiclovers #housemusic
#deephouse#djbars#techhouse#techhouseevents#housemusiclovers#housemusic#dj#londonevents#london#djset
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Next Sunday I am back @tamesisdock for a Hot Sunday Afternoon of Deep House, House, Tech House... #housemusic #techhouse #deephouse #dj #producer #london #boatparty #housemusicbars #djbars #londonevents #techhouseevents #techhouselondon (at Tamesis Dock)
#londonevents#techhouse#dj#housemusicbars#djbars#producer#deephouse#boatparty#techhouseevents#techhouselondon#london#housemusic
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