Kate Nash Reaches Her Wits’ End In “My Bile”

Kate Nash 

Shares New SingleMy Bile
New Album 9 Sad Symphonies Out 21st June 2024 

Announces US Tour On Sale Friday 17 May

UK Instore Dates Announced + 28th November KOKO Show On-Sale

Kate Nash shares her latest single “My Bile,” the final release ahead of her much-anticipated album 9 Sad Symphonies, due June 21 on Kill Rock Stars. Renowned for her fearless approach to storytelling and unapologetic authenticity, “My Bile” is a livid, emotional exorcism that confronts the relentless pressures of society.

Kate explains: “My Bile is about being at your wits’ end & having nothing left to give to society’s expectation of you. And I guess reassessing past behaviours and current priorities. You know you’re on empty when you’re spewing up bile. I’ve realised I need more reserves for myself. I’m at a point in my life where I want to say no to things & no to people. And I’m in my mid 30s so if I don’t do that I end up with an injury or a migraine. At this point I’m confident that I’m a hardworking & compassionate person so I trust my instincts when I want to tell someone to shut up or fuck off. 


I’ve also worked hard on biting my tongue, so if the instinct is there I allow myself to trust it. Whenever I regret something it’s usually because I didn’t listen to my instincts sooner. Then again I have OCD so sometimes my instincts are like ‘do this dangerous thing to make sure bad stuff won’t happen’. It’s a fun mental health challenge! I have to do regular checks on who’s in the driver’s seat. After all the shit & abhorrent behaviours I’ve seen over the years I’ve realised that it does take a toll on your self worth if you don’t have strict boundaries. Life throws surprises at you too so you have to accept you can’t control all of it but not everyone’s invited to my birthday party anymore. If I’ve got cake, I’m saving slices for the best not for the masses.”

Watch “My Bile” visualiser here

Stream “My Bile” here


Pre-save 9 Sad Symphonies

Kate Nash is also thrilled to announce her forthcoming US tour, kicking off this autumn. The tour will see Kate revisiting the venues where she’s left an indelible mark, and also venturing into new territories. Tickets go on sale Friday 17 May and are available here. Full dates below.

On the US tour, Kate says: “I’m so excited to be coming back to the US this fall, revisiting some of my favourite venues in the country and playing some new ones too. Can’t wait to see & reconnect with my US fans who have always given me the warmest welcome & to play them some new music. My band & I are gonna drink pumpkin spice lattes and rock the shit out of everyone.

Kate’s long-awaited fifth studio album 9 Sad Symphonies is her first full-length since 2018’s Yesterday Was Forever and her first release with a label in over a decade. Moving away from her more ragey recent output, the new album takes inspiration from old Hollywood and vintage musicals. It’s filled with lush string arrangements across 10 enchanting songs that may appear bright on the surface, but ultimately emerge as a deeply layered quest to find beauty in a chaotic world. 

Since first appearing in 2007 with her explosive debut Made Of Bricks, Kate Nash’s career has been marked by her fearless, unapologetic approach to storytelling. The multi-platinum-selling artist and actress continues to push boundaries across creative platforms, from her acclaimed role in Netflix’s mega-hit series GLOW to her award-winning documentary, Kate Nash: Underestimate the Girl. Last year, she starred in the musical Only Gold, which she co-created with Hamilton choreographer Andy Blankenbuehler. With each project, Kate invites her fans to join her on a journey of self-discovery and transformation, creating a bond that transcends music alone.  

This Friday (17th May) Kate will perform at London’s EartH Hackney which is SOLD OUT and has recently announced a second London date at the iconic KOKO on 28 November with tickets selling fast. Promising to be two unforgettable evenings of music and community magic, she continues to push boundaries and defy expectations whilst solidifying her status as a National Treasure.

9 Sad Symphonies track listing

Millions of Heartbeats

Misery

Wasteman

Abandoned

Horsie

My Bile

These Feelings

Space Odyssey 2001

Ray

Vampyre

UK TOUR DATES 

Friday 17th May, London - EartH

Tuesday 28th November, London - KOKO

UK INSTORE DATES

Friday 21st June, London Rough Trade East

Saturday 22nd June, Brighton Resident

Monday 24th June, Liverpool Jacaranda

Tuesday 25th June Rough Trade Nottingham

Wednesdat 26th June Kingston Banquet (2nd show added on the same day due to demand)

US TOUR DATES

 Thursday 10th October - Philadelphia, PA - World Cafe Live

Friday 11th October - Washington DC - Howard Theatre

Saturday 12th October - New York, NY - Racket

Tuesday 15th October - Boston, MA - Crystal Ballroom

Thursday 17th October - Montreal, QC - Foufounes Électriques

Friday 18th October - Toronto, ON - Longboat Hall

Saturday 19th October - Grand Rapids, MI - Pyramid Scheme

Sunday 20th October - Indianapolis, IN - Turntable

Tuesday 22nd October - Chicago, IL - Thalia Hall

Wednesday 23rd October - Omaha, NE - Slowdown

Thursday 24th October - Boulder, CO - Fox Theatre

Saturday 26th October - Boise, ID - Treefort Music Hall

Sunday 27th October - Seattle, WA - Crocodile

Monday 28th October - Vancouver, BC - Hollywood Theatre

Tuesday 29th October - Portland, OR - Wonder Ballroom

Friday 1st November - Pioneertown, CA - Pappy & Harriet’s

Saturday 2nd November - Los Angeles, CA - Teragram Ballroom

Sunday 3rd November - San Francisco, CA - The Chapel

More information on Kate Nash 

Nearly twenty years into her ever-evolving career, London and LA-based, Brit award-winning singer, songwriter, actor and activist Kate Nash has seen it all. She's achieved huge commercial success – 2007's debut Made of Bricks, featuring the hit single Foundations, reached number 1 in the UK and spent seven months in the top 40 – seen the darker side of the industry after being dropped in 2012 following 2010's Bernard Butler-assisted My Best Friend Is You, forged her own path as a successful independent artist via 2013's punk-y Girl Talk and 2018's Yesterday Was Forever, and starred in HBO's hit wrestling drama, GLOW. She's also been the subject of an award-winning documentary, Kate Nash: Underestimate the Girl, and also co-created a musical, Only Gold, with Hamilton choreographer Andy Blankenbuehler. Oh, and she also starred in that too. Still only 36, Nash isn't finished shape-shifting just yet; after signing with legendary label Kill Rock Stars, whose alumni include Nash favourites Elliott Smith and Sleater-Kinney, in early 2024, she'll release her fifth album, 9 Sad Symphonies, in June.

Inspired by old Hollywood, vintage musicals and a desperate quest to find beauty in a rotten world, it's another sonic shift following her “rage-y” recent output. “It needed to be cinematic and dreamy,” Nash says of the 10-track album (the title is both a joke and an ode to passing achievable goals when creativity crumbles). As for the sonic shifts, it's just second nature: “I do things based on what I'm feeling at the time, and what I'm inspired by,” she explains. 

That moment of the album's creation was fuelled by two things; her work on Only Gold and a global pandemic that curtailed filming on the fourth season of GLOW and sent Nash – and everyone – into a tailspin. After a period of laying bed watching zombie movies, creativity started to arrive in the autumn and winter of 2020, with songs being worked on well into 2021. Having worked with Danish producer Frederick Thaae on her musical, they quickly reconnected to start work on 9 Sad Symphonies. “We were in this completely different landscape for writing songs [on the musical], which was completely freeing,” Nash explains. “I was writing for a story, I was writing about a King and a Queen and a proper story arc. In that world you need the audience to understand the songs immediately, it's very direct, and it has lots of editing which I'd never done. It changed my outlook on songwriting. Also, we said at the beginning that we wanted to make something beautiful, nothing harsh. I've done a lot of harsh stuff before. We wanted loads of beautiful string arrangements.”

These melodic, bright-on-the-surface but deeply layered songs started to emerge out of creative scenarios that had been completely changed by the pandemic. “We were on Zoom, which was... challenging,” she laughs. “We discussed ideas and then we'd hang up on Zoom, go away for three hours, or Frederick would send me the small thing we'd started, then I'd start writing and doing melodies and lyrics, and he would do production, and then we'd meet up on Zoom later.” Slowly the songs started to evolve, their unusual creation adding intriguing problems to try and overcome. “We'd get stuck a lot but you just had to let the stress go and come back to it. It's a different version of the album to the one we would have made normally.”

The album's curtain raiser, Millions of Heartbeats, sets out the album's lyrical themes perfectly. “It's about that point in the pandemic where I had lost my spark for life,” she says. “And I'm a pretty sparky person, so it was really sad to me.” She references the lyric “the spark is lit at such a low flame” as a crucial moment. “I felt like I lost a part of myself. I didn't know how to get it back.” As with all of the songs on the album, it's not just about one thing, however. “I think it also sums up a lot of how I feel about how people act in the world right now. Am I a number or am I a person? What are we trying to be right now? I'm a human being. But we're so quantifiable and packaged and everyone is a brand. We're in this capitalist explosion and I feel the effect of it in a way I've never felt before.” But it's also a song that, by its end, flickers with a light that can't be completely put out. “At the end of the day, the world is beautiful, there are all these heartbeats out there, and there is hope,” she says with a smile. “We have to try! You can't fucking give up. This song is a sign of what's to come – there's going to be darkness and depression but we'll get to hope by the end.”

A rare guitar appears on Ray, which delves deeper into mental health struggles, detailing depression and anxiety. It's a theme Nash is keen to share with her fans in a typically honest manner. “It's natural for an artist to write about emotions and feelings and darkness,” Nash says. “Also a lot of my fans suffer from depression too and I noticed it more when I was doing my livestream chats over lockdown. Not talking about it is not the solution. Being open and creating that community within my fanbase is really important.” It's one she's fostered not only via the Kickstarter campaigns that funded Girl Talk and Yesterday Was Forever, but also her Patreon account which she used in the pandemic to connect with her loyal fans via livestreams.

That darkness also weaves through Misery, which marries a propulsive string arrangement and a buoyant beat to lyrics that try to outrun the emotion of its title, while the livid My Bile is an emotional exorcism married to beatific strings and crashing drums. “I guess that song is the little patience I have left to give to all the bullshit, all the shitty parts of the industry, the media, the way people talk to other human beings, me as a woman in the industry, all the things people say about you online,” she explains. “I'm done. I don't have anything left to give to that. I've proved who I am with actions, which is more important. I just have bile left.” There's love on the album too, specifically on Space Odyssey 2001, which recounts a first proper date with her now partner. On the surface it feels like a diss of the Kubrick classic, 2001: Space Odyssey, but is more about its poor choice given the context. “It's the wrong film for a date,” she smiles, “but I love the film. I like making jokes in songs. I like that there's this beautiful love song but it's also complaining about this critically acclaimed film being too long. I don't recommend it for a first date!”

While the album was finished at the end of 2021, Nash wasn't sure what to do with it. Free from the typical record industry framework – no manager, no label, no booking agents – she did two things; went on tour in 2022, which was rejuvenating, and joined TikTok. Her first post was a timeline of her extraordinary career, which ended with her questioning the best way in which to release the new album (some of the songs, including Misery, Wasteman and Horsie, had already started to emerge without a label). That first post went viral, leading to an influx of offers from labels and managers, creating a scenario Nash had been in before; dealing with some of the industry's shadier characters. One label, however, had been interested for a while. “Kill Rock Stars had been pursuing me for two years. They had been checking in for a while saying 'we notice the album hasn't come out, we really love it'.” Once Nash had secured an excellent new manager, the loose ends were tied up and the album was ready to go.

Recent one-off single, Change, released to coincide with the signing announcement, was an example of what having a label can give you. “I didn't have to do anything,” she laughs. “I've been doing everything myself, alongside my band and my tour manager and my various managers, but I am always the driving force. But it's like you're driving a 16 wheeler – there's so much you have to take responsibility for. What was so nice with this release was that I just did the creative bit and the stuff I'm good at. The label takes care of everything else.”

It's been a refreshing change to be able to fully focus on the creative side. That creativity is also there in the artwork for 9 Sad Symphonies, which features Nash in front of an old school Hollywood backdrop that recalls British nature while also alluding to Nash's on-off home of LA. That visual world will also extend to Nash's always incredible live shows, which are a key goal for her in 2024. “You can always push things further and take it to a new place,” she says. “So with this album I want to play really quality shows.”

On 9 Sad Symphonies, Nash has taken another huge step towards cementing her place as one of Britain's most unique and fearless talents. “I've climbed through the sewers of this industry and so my goal is to make good music I believe in, to have longevity, and have good live shows,” she states. “I make a living from my music, which is awesome.” As for other ambitions and expectations, she's been doing this long enough to know not to place your hopes in things you can't control. “I don't feel competitive with the industry anymore. I've been in the game for twenty years, and I'm in my own league now.”

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