Latest news with #CapeForestier

The Age
29-04-2025
- Entertainment
- The Age
Angus Stone: ‘I just wanted to have a beer and write music'
Each week, Benjamin Law asks public figures to discuss the subjects we're told to keep private by getting them to roll a die. The numbers they land on are the topics they're given. This week, he talks to Angus Stone. The ARIA- and APRA-award-winning singer-songwriter, 39, has recorded six albums alongside his sister, Julia, the latest of which is Cape Forestier. He performs solo as Dope Lemon. His latest album is Golden Wolf. RELIGION Did you grow up with religion? We weren't an overly religious family. In a way, music was more our religion. Dad was a wedding singer and we grew up listening to all the greats being played, falling asleep underneath wedding tables in an orbit of love and joy. Watching and listening to him do that was really powerful. Does making music – whether in the studio or on stage – feel like a spiritual experience? Definitely. I can walk down the street now and a stranger will come up to me and treat me like family. We've never met, but they've lived alongside different chapters of my life through my albums. It's almost this parallel universe of togetherness. [Playing live] is a place where time stands still. I'll close my eyes and walk through my own short films. And it's therapeutic, the way that I can tell myself things that I wouldn't necessarily be able to otherwise. I love being able to go to those places. Music allows me to do that. What particular Commandments do you have for making music? I'm a completionist. For me, it's really important – no matter what idea is on the table – to make sure that you give it the justice it deserves and see it through. It may not reveal itself to be this great thing at the beginning but, if you stick with it, great things can occur. Complete this sentence for me. 'Others go to church. I go …' Fishing. There's something about watching the land disappear and you're out in the deep blue, just a droplet in the ocean. BODIES So much of your work involves travelling, late nights, playing in front of an audience. Adrenaline up, adrenaline down. How do you make your body go through that night after night? For me, something that has taken a lot of years to figure out, is that you really need routine. Another is making sure that I go for a run each day, followed by a sauna and steam. So, I'll sweat it out, go for a nice cold beer, then walk on stage after that. You've been performing from such a young age. A lot of people get messed up by performing so much – and getting famous – so young. How have you managed your mental health? For me, it's the music itself. I grew up writing down how I was feeling and what I was going through. There's a therapeutic value I get from sitting back and listening to something that I've penned, whether it's on a voice note or on the bus. It's like a puzzle piece that I can push back into place. Also, a stranger might walk up to you on the street and share a story about how the music has affected them in a profound way. Those are the moments where it all makes sense; they bring so much joy to your heart.

Sydney Morning Herald
29-04-2025
- Entertainment
- Sydney Morning Herald
Angus Stone: ‘I just wanted to have a beer and write music'
Each week, Benjamin Law asks public figures to discuss the subjects we're told to keep private by getting them to roll a die. The numbers they land on are the topics they're given. This week, he talks to Angus Stone. The ARIA- and APRA-award-winning singer-songwriter, 39, has recorded six albums alongside his sister, Julia, the latest of which is Cape Forestier. He performs solo as Dope Lemon. His latest album is Golden Wolf. RELIGION Did you grow up with religion? We weren't an overly religious family. In a way, music was more our religion. Dad was a wedding singer and we grew up listening to all the greats being played, falling asleep underneath wedding tables in an orbit of love and joy. Watching and listening to him do that was really powerful. Does making music – whether in the studio or on stage – feel like a spiritual experience? Definitely. I can walk down the street now and a stranger will come up to me and treat me like family. We've never met, but they've lived alongside different chapters of my life through my albums. It's almost this parallel universe of togetherness. [Playing live] is a place where time stands still. I'll close my eyes and walk through my own short films. And it's therapeutic, the way that I can tell myself things that I wouldn't necessarily be able to otherwise. I love being able to go to those places. Music allows me to do that. What particular Commandments do you have for making music? I'm a completionist. For me, it's really important – no matter what idea is on the table – to make sure that you give it the justice it deserves and see it through. It may not reveal itself to be this great thing at the beginning but, if you stick with it, great things can occur. Complete this sentence for me. 'Others go to church. I go …' Fishing. There's something about watching the land disappear and you're out in the deep blue, just a droplet in the ocean. BODIES So much of your work involves travelling, late nights, playing in front of an audience. Adrenaline up, adrenaline down. How do you make your body go through that night after night? For me, something that has taken a lot of years to figure out, is that you really need routine. Another is making sure that I go for a run each day, followed by a sauna and steam. So, I'll sweat it out, go for a nice cold beer, then walk on stage after that. You've been performing from such a young age. A lot of people get messed up by performing so much – and getting famous – so young. How have you managed your mental health? For me, it's the music itself. I grew up writing down how I was feeling and what I was going through. There's a therapeutic value I get from sitting back and listening to something that I've penned, whether it's on a voice note or on the bus. It's like a puzzle piece that I can push back into place. Also, a stranger might walk up to you on the street and share a story about how the music has affected them in a profound way. Those are the moments where it all makes sense; they bring so much joy to your heart.