Learn more about songwriter and producer Colouring, who just shared a new track ahead of his upcoming album
With his anticipated new album Love To You, Mate due on 23rd February, and following the singles ‘Lune’, ‘For You’ and ‘Love To You, Mate’, Jack Kenworthy – aka Colouring – has shared another new track, ‘How’d It Get So Real?’, ahead of the album release.
‘How’d It Get So Real?’ was something Kenworthy’s wife Helen said to him during the year following her brother’s cancer diagnosis and the song is a message of support to her during this turbulent time. With its shuffling groove and beautiful earworm of a chorus, the song is one of the most uplifting and life-affirming on the album.
Listen to the single here:
I've been less scared of it because it's not my story. It’s a shared one
Jack Kenworthy
“I’ve always been on the side of making up scenarios rather than being really honest about my life within my music,” adds Jack about his second album Love To You, Mate. “This is the first time I’ve been able to do that. I’ve been less scared of it because it’s not my story. It’s a shared one.”
The Nottingham-based songwriter and producer’s life was upended in February 2021, months before the release of his debut album Wake, when his brother-in-law Greg Baker was diagnosed with Stage 4 cancer. What followed was the most “unbelievable” year of a family’s togetherness when life seemed set on fracturing the life of a young man. Kenworthy, knowing in particular that he needed to be a pillar of support to his partner Helen, whom he’s since married, found that the family’s journey together in the face of adversity was both brutal and beautiful.
We’re all so grateful to have had him in our lives
Jack Kenworthy
“We were of course so terrified,” Kenworthy remembers of the following Christmas spent in hospital, a memory etched into the album’s title track. “But they’re just such positive, kind and inspiring people who had everything thrown at them and handled it all with this incredible togetherness and spirit. We’re all so grateful to have had him in our lives.”
Colouring has been a solo project since Wake, an album influenced by The Blue Nile alongside the 00s post-Britpop greats (early Coldplay, Elbow) but taking electronic and rhythmic cues from Radiohead and James Blake. Originally formed of four friends while he was studying at Goldsmiths, the band came to a natural end in 2019.
Thanks to a confidence boost in early 2020 when Kenworthy’s longtime collaborator Gianluca Buccellati (Arlo Parks) laughed off the idea of him folding the project, Kenworthy did what he usually does: write compulsively as a means of nourishment and escape.
Around the time of Greg’s illness Jack had been building “a new palette of sound” that he hadn’t designated for anything in particular. “I was trying to be like, ‘Just write, just say anything. It doesn’t matter, you can change the lyrics later.’” Certain phrases from family members would get lodged in his head during that year. “Things like, ‘How did it get so real?’ That was something that Helen said to me once,” Kenworthy reveals. “And then I was writing something and it just fell into that song.” There was “no real intention” to make an album about a turbulent time but it “sort of became that”.
On ‘How Did It Get So Real?’ Kenworthy pulls focus on supporting his wife (“I promise you a home / Inside of me alone”) atop spectral keys, shuffling break beats and an In Rainbows-era arpeggio guitar melody. It’s the only obvious example of guitars on Love To You, Mate. Kenworthy and Buccellati made a “conscious effort” to use only piano, drums, bass and whatever curio atmospherics the OP-1 synth sampler could muster.
Singing into the OP-1 “gave it a human, organic element” rather than songs sounding too synthetic. “I think that was the goal, really, to keep the soul behind the electronic parts.”
Once Kenworthy accepted that the album was a musical prism refracting those troubled yet oddly uplifting times, he felt able to make his songwriting more personal.
Sonically, Kenworthy doesn’t bog the album down with sadness. The album also includes songs that are more upbeat tracks that serve to celebrate life and the unity of friendship.
“Love To You, Mate is a love letter to my wife, family and Greg for what they all did; a photograph of that time.” Kenworthy continues. “We were this tight-knit, inseparable group of friends for a whole year… a year we look back on with great pride. I really feel we’ve made this music together.”
Additionally, Kenworthy will be going on tour this Spring. Make sure to follow Colouring’s pages to find out more details.
You can pre-order the album now:
Next In Next In
⇥ Female, Non-Binary Vocal Collective, Deep Throat Choir Presents ‘In Order to Know You’