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This Is The Kit + Cristobal and the Sea at The Haunt, Brighton

November 24th 2015 | Tickets £10  | Facebook Event | Last.fm Event | Songkick Event | Maps & Directions

Kate Stables

“Just one of the best things I’ve heard all year….wonderful wonderful stuff”
Guy Garvey (Elbow), BBC 6 Music

“Absolutely gorgeous, like an aural bath with the warm water lapping over you” Cerys Matthews, BBC 6music

This Is The Kit is the much beloved musical project of Kate Stables, born in England and based in Paris, though the heart of their musical community remains in Bristol, UK. Kate sings, plays guitar, banjo, trumpet and percussion, while a cast of carefully hand-plucked friends deliver guitar strums, banjo plucks, hushed horns and electronic textures that sit beneath Stables’ easy, earnest lilt. Her long time collaborator and regular live companion Jesse Vernon produced the album and contributes guitars, percussion, violin and percussion.

While on tour, This is the Kit is a shape shifting entity ranging from a female duo with friend Rozi Plain to a psychedelia tinged electric five-piece. Aaron Dessner (The National) is working with the band to produce the follow-up album to ‘Wriggle Out the Restless’, now being reissued by Aaron’s label Brassland.

“The aim is to have fun playing with people whose work I really like,” says Kate in her simple and direct fashion. “The more you exchange and share with people the better things get and the more you learn.” This is the Kit has or will be opening for artists such as Jose Gonzales, Jeffrey Lewis, The National, Alexi Murdoch, Iron & Wine and Jolie Holland, and was recently selected by Sharon Van Etten as her “Favorite New Artist” in an interview with Pitchfork.

Cristobal and the Sea – new signing to City Slang from London.

“Tuneful, with a rustic, semi-acoustic charm, full of woah-oh-ohs, Sunset of Our Troubles did initially remind me of Mumford & Sons, but then I noticed they’re on City Slang, who I trust implicitly with my record collection, if not my life, and I realised it couldn’t be… their music – which includes elements of bossa nova, Afropop, folk and rock – and that of Animal Collective (they’re produced by Rusty Santos, who’s worked with AC, Grizzly Bear and Beach House), and suddenly they seemed ever cooler.” The Guardian

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