Winter, aka dream-pop artist Samira Winter, is not shy about the musical influences behind her terrific new album What Kind of Blue Are You? -- a mix of '80s/'90s shoegaze and indie which she wears like a badge of honor. She also uses them to color her excellent songs, not relying on mere pastiche. We asked her to run through some of the album's biggest influences, which include some obvious ones (My Bloody Valentine, The Sundays), as well as a few things that you might not expect. Read her annotated list and give the album a spin below.
You can catch Winter on tour in October and November, including a NYC show at Baby's All Right on 11/4 with tourmates Peel Dream Magazine. All dates are listed below.
WINTER - 10 INFLUENCES BEHIND 'HOW BLUE ARE YOU?'
Blueboy - "Boys Don’t Matter" One of the first songs we recorded for the album was the opening track “wish I knew.” The demo I brought into the studio was really shoegaze and as we brainstormed on the production, Joo Joo was like “wait I need to show you this Blueboy song” and played this track. I gasped and my heart melted. I have such a sweet spot for Sarah Records especially because it was all I listened to as I started Winter back when I lived in Boston. To me it’s an extra dose of nostalgia. We took this track as inspiration and went on to find lush acoustic guitar sounds. Reconnecting with Blueboy and that twee Sarah Records sensibility is one of the ways this album feels full circle to me.
Gregg Araki I became obsessed with Araki’s films from the 90’s and early 2000’s while I was writing and recording the album in 2020. The aesthetics are so spot on - from the shoegaze soundtracks to the blasé dialogue to the wardrobe style and incredible set design. The attitude of the characters is so cool. I feel like I learned from those 90s queer shoegazer characters and leaned in on their punk attitude when tracking loud feedback guitars and filming the music video for “atonement” which is all shot on DV tape as Hatchie and I play runaways in Hollywood.
Market Hotel Just before the lockdown, I played a show at Market Hotel and that night I fell in love. He worked at that venue so whenever I would come visit NY I would hang out there to kill time. There’s this really cool window behind the stage where you can see the train tracks. It was such a romantic time in my life and the grungy Brooklyn streets were our playground. At the same time I have an intense love-hate relationship with the city and so it always triggers all sorts of feelings. I wrote the song ‘mr. on-my-mind’ around that time inspired by that feeling of a new love and feeling lost in the city. Even though I wrote the whole album in LA, I feel like if the album was the soundtrack to a film it would all be shot in a northern East Coast city during the fall - it’s the perfect scenery to listen to the album in my opinion.