Could you tell us a little bit about how K/B FOREVER came together?
It’s really just a collection of songs I’ve made over the past couple of years that I felt made sense together. I feel the record is a good reflection and representation of some of the ideas I’ve been experimenting with. I’ve been pretty quiet for a really long time but I finally feel like I have something to say. K/B FOREVER is a moniker I’ve gone by since I started making music and it’s something my friends and fans have come to know me by. I think the phrase alone has really been something that’s kept me going during the times I haven’t been releasing or making music. It’s a reminder that no matter what happens, I’m still that bitch, and that I matter. The things I have to say matter, even if for no one else but myself, it’s important that I continue to exist and express and live unapologetically. And when I die I can say that I truly lived and loved and made art that I cared about, and I think those things make you immortal. You live on, forever.
You wrote a song that references the Euston train station. How much time do you think you’ve spent there in your life?
Referencing Euston was kind of a play on the phrase from the movie Apollo 13, “Houston, we have a problem.” It was me admitting that I was struggling at the time I wrote it. I said Euston because it was the station where I’d catch the train to see the guy I was in love with at the time. He was really helping me through a bad time but I ultimately had to leave because I needed to work on myself and I didn’t wanna hurt him anymore. It’s also just a really bizarre place. Like a constant hellscape at any time of the day. I try not to spend much time there.
Do you have any formative memories of listening to music growing up? How much has living in South London affected the way you write songs and make music?
I remember being in Ibiza with my dad when I was in my early teens and he had hired a car for the weekend, and we were driving along the coast and he played me Chanel Orange. It was the first time I had really listened to a whole album back to back and felt like it was a part of me. It’s all I listened to for about three months. When I was 9 until I was about 11 or 12, my mum used to host a neo-soul fusion night in Camberwell called “Organic” upstairs of what used to be The Funky Monkey pub and rehearsals would be in my living room. I used to have to get to the venue early and sneak in so that I could watch the show. Being so immersed in live music, and in my community from a young age has very much affected how I approach and feel music. I met a lot of my collaborators and friends in music growing up in South London. Some of my favourite artists of all time are from here. I think there's just something in the water, honestly.