Draft:Mama ft. Antonella


Mama ft. Antonella
OriginWolverhampton, England
Genres
Years active2022–present
MembersAntonella Gambotto-Burke
Gavin Monaghan
Websitemamaftantonella.com

Described as "the most dynamic outfit to hit the scene in years,"[1] Mama ft. Antonella are a British indie rock duo from Wolverhampton founded in late 2022 by the Australian-born author and journalist Antonella Gambotto-Burke and her fiance, Irish-British multiplatinum record producer Gavin Monaghan

Their debut was the independent single release I Want What I Want in 2023, which quickly attracted over 30,000 hits,[2] followed a few months later by the digital single Real Girl. 

Mama ft. Antonella have cited various bands and artists as influences. Gambotto-Burke's favourite artists and songs include A&W by Lana del Rey, Nietzsche by The Dandy Warhols, Red Right Hand by Iggy Pop and Jarvis Cocker, Fish Paste by Die Antwoord, Waiter by Moses, and Dream Girl Evil by Florence and the Machine.[3]

Monaghan loves Mass Production by Iggy Pop, Because the Night by Patti Smith, Youth of Eglington by Black Uhuru, Count Me Out by Kendrick Lamar, Protect Ya Neck (The Jump Off) by Wu-Tang Clan, and Speed by Atari Teenage Riot.[4]

Mama ft. Antonella worked on their first album throughout 2023 and 2024 and have yet to play live.[5] “We’ve had quite a few requests and do plan to go live," Gambotto-Burke told an interviewer, "but not until later this year ... We currently live in different counties, meaning we’re constantly in transit – packing suitcases, in and out of hotels with our laptops.”[6]

History

edit

Antonella Gambotto-Burke

edit

Born to Northern Italian parents on the upper-middle-class North Shore (Sydney),[7] Gambotto-Burke, celebrated for her feminism,[8] is the first child and only daughter of the late businessman Giancarlo Gambotto, whose High Court win against WCP Ltd. changed Australian corporate law, made the front pages, is featured in Oxbridge exams,[9] and was the subject of a book edited by Professor Ian Ramsay.[10] In her youth, her mother was a professional singer and performed on Australian television.[11]

Gambotto-Burke did not speak English until she went to school, where she was frequently selected to sing before the school. She stopped at 16, when her grandmother died. "She was the most beautiful woman, and her death was drawn-out - cancer - and deeply traumatic," Gambotto-Burke told an interviewer. "So the singing just stopped. Boom. I started wearing black. The grief was profound." [12]

At the age of eighteen, Gambotto-Burke moved to London and began working for the NME. It was during this time that she met Alan McGee, who was then living in a squat but who would, years later, become the CEO of Creation Records and discover Oasis_(band). McGee, recognising Gambotto-Burke's potential, wanted her to sing with the Jesus and Mary Chain but she refused on the basis that she was "too shy".[13] The two have remained lifelong friends.[14]

In 2019, McGee asked Gambotto-Burke to join him for dinner with a few friends. One was a Grammy Award-winning producer. In an interview, she recalled the pivotal moment the producer addressed her: "'You should sing,' he said, a propos of nothing. 'The way air moves over your larynx. I work with voices all the time, and you’d be really good.' 'DO IT! DO IT!' Alan cried. The producer’s tone was so authoritative and Alan just looked so happy that for the first time in my life, I felt brave enough to try.[15]

Gavin Monaghan

edit

Monaghan, the only child to a British mother and an Irish father, has ADHD.[16] [17] In his youth, he was a reserve member of the Commonwealth Games British karate team. Monaghan is a Second Dan black belt.[18]

Drifting in and out of bands throughout his twenties, he played at some of the biggest festivals in the world and supporting bands such as The Cult and Zodiac Mindwarp. Monaghan "detested" touring as his appetite for mayhem made life increasingly difficult,[19] and so he moved into production. Within a short space of time, he opened his first studio in London. He has 30+ gold and platinum records.[20]

The heavily tattooed Monaghan has worked with Robert Plant, Led Zeppelin, Grace Jones, Editors, Paolo Nutini, The Twang, The Holloways, Ocean Colour Scene, Tony Christie, The Cult, Sly and Robbie, Jimmy Somerville, Aswad, Elvis Costello, Terry Hall, Kirsty MacColl, Femi Kuti, Jah Wobble, Meredith Brooks, Goldblade, Nizlopi, Scott Matthews, Lemmy, The Destroyers, Stone, Headshrinkers, The Sherlocks, The Blinders, and JAWS, among hundreds of others.[21]

His music is featured in innumerable advertisements and multimillion dollar productions ranging from the Austin Powers and Twilight (film) franchises to Gangs of London and Peaky Blinders.[22]

In late April 2024, he was commissioned by Robert Plant to "reimagine" two Led Zeppelin tracks, Kashmir and Whole Lotta Love, for the Wolverhampton Wanderers football team.[23] [24]

Monaghan is a two-time winner of both the BMA Producer of the Year and Studio of the Year Awards (2019, 2022/3).[25]

2022–present: band beginnings

edit

When asked by an interviewer how they first met, Monaghan replied, "Antonella met me in a candy store, turned around and smiled, and that’s when I fell for the leader of the pack.”[26]

Gambotto-Burke has said that in reality, she and Monaghan first met in 2022, when an industry friend insisted she go to his studio to record her first song. Because he suggested she sack her band, which she then did, the track was never released. Gambotto-Burke was "devastated" as she’d worked on that song for months. "Gavin explained that he wanted me to change genres on the basis that I needed a bigger framework for my voice," she said.[27]

The origins of the band's name are straightforward. “A few years ago, Antonella wrote a magnificent book called Mama,[28] and I thought it would be fantastic band name for an affirmatively female-fronted band," Monaghan told an interviewer. "It’s so her.”[29]

Gambotto-Burke said in an interview that they have just finished mixing their first album.[30]

Singles (digital)

edit

"I Want What I Want"

edit

"I Want What I Want" was independently released on June 23 2023 with no publicity and no fanbase as the band had never played live. Despite this, it soon attracted over 30,000 streams on Spotify.[31]

With the song, Monaghan wanted to recreate the Berlin clubs of the 1990s. “I remember one sweaty underground rave in particular,” he says. “The smell of Amyl was all-pervasive, and the dancing was incredibly tribal. So I wanted to recreate, using 8-bit samples and classic analogue equipment, the same pulsing industrial and early techno sound.”

To achieve this, Monaghan used a Korg MS20 for the bass with the glide setting on to achieve the classic Giorgio Moroder pulse with a 909 drum machine sampled to tape and distorted to achieve the Euro Techno sound he thought “would be the perfect foil to Antonella’s big, strict diva voice”.[32]

The video[33] features Gambotto-Burke dancing in Regencycore and fetishism dresses.

Real Girl

edit

Independently released on September 24 2023, Real Girl soon outstripped its predecessor in terms of streams.[34]

Members

edit

Current members

  • Antonella Gambotto-Burke – vocals, lyrics, toplines, some drums, some production, cover artwork (2022–present)
  • Gavin Monaghan – instruments, music other than toplines, production (2022–present)

Collaborations with other musicians

  • Chris Budd – music other than toplines, production (2024–present)
  • Ash Sheehan of The Twang – drums, brass, percussion (2023–present)

Discography

edit
Mama ft. Antonella discography
Music videos1
Singles2


Music videos

edit
Title Year Director
"I Want What I Want" 2023 Antonella Gambotto-Burke
edit

References

edit
  1. ^ 'Mama ft. Antonella drops debut single I Want What I Want', by Holly-Beth Quinn, Fashion Industry Broadcast, 23 June 2023
  2. ^ 'First ever single by Wolverhampton music producer turned singer attracts over 30,000 Spotify hits', by Deborah Hardiman, Express & Star, 26 August 2023
  3. ^ 'LISTEN! ‘Real Girl by Mama ft Antonella : An Amazonian literate vocal swoops over disco dystopia’, by John Robb (musician), Louder Than War, 27 November 2023
  4. ^ 'LISTEN! ‘Real Girl by Mama ft Antonella : An Amazonian literate vocal swoops over disco dystopia’, by John Robb (musician), Louder Than War, 27 November 2023
  5. ^ 'Singer's new music inspired by the love of Wolverhampton and the man who brought her here', by Paul Jenkins, Express & Star, 30 March 2024
  6. ^ 'Interview with Mama feat. Antonella', by Kimmo Leijala, EmotionZine, 7 July 2023
  7. ^ 'The Eclipse: A Memoir of Suicide', by Antonella Gambotto-Burke, Broken Ankle Books, 2004
  8. ^ 'The top 47 most empowering feminist quotes of all time', Stylist (magazine), 2022
  9. ^ 'Gambotto v WCP [1995 182 CLR 432'], by Oxbridge Law team, updated 4 January 2024
  10. ^ Gambotto v WCP Ltd: Its Implications for Corporate Regulation, edited by Ian M. Ramsay, Centre for Corporate Law and Securities Regulation, Faculty of Law, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, 1996. ISBN 0-7325-0821-5
  11. ^ BBC radio interview with Gambotto-Burke, 17 May 2024
  12. ^ 'She wants. She gets: Antonella Gambotto-Burke finds a voice – hers', by Bernard Zuel, 7 July 2023
  13. ^ 'Riots, Raves, & Running a Label: Special Guest Antonella Gambotto-Burke', by Alan McGee, Boogaloo Radio, May 27, 2019
  14. ^ 'Photograph of Gambotto-Burke with Alan McGee and Killing Joke's Martin "Youth" Glover', Boogaloo Radio, Highgate, London, 2019
  15. ^ 'She wants. She gets: Antonella Gambotto-Burke finds a voice – hers', by Bernard Zuel, 7 July 2023
  16. ^ 'Official Mama website', retrieved 9 June 2024
  17. ^ 'Everyone says you should NEVER try to change a man. Well I did because my new love had an unhealthy, workaholic lifestyle that needed radically overhauling! So has it all ended in disaster?', by Antonella Gambotto-Burke, The Daily Mail, 25 January 2023
  18. ^ 'LISTEN! ‘Real Girl by Mama ft Antonella : An Amazonian literate vocal swoops over disco dystopia’, by John Robb (musician), Louder Than War, 27 November 2023
  19. ^ 'Everyone says you should NEVER try to change a man. Well I did because my new love had an unhealthy, workaholic lifestyle that needed radically overhauling! So has it all ended in disaster?', by Antonella Gambotto-Burke, The Daily Mail, 25 January 2023
  20. ^ 'First ever single by Wolverhampton music producer turned singer attracts over 30,000 Spotify hits', by Deborah Hardiman, Express & Star, 26 August 2023
  21. ^ 'Birmingham Music Awards'
  22. ^ 'New Led Zeppelin mix set for Molineux debut', Wolverhampton Wanderers News, 10 May 2024
  23. ^ 'Gavin Monaghan and Antonella Gambotto-Burke with Robert Plant', Led Zeppelin News, 25 April 2024
  24. ^ 'Robert Plant is reportedly working on a new version of a Led Zeppelin classic for a top-secret project', by Fraser Lewry, Classic Rock, 26 April 2024
  25. ^ Gavin Monaghan: Personal Instagram', retrieved 9 June 2024
  26. ^ 'Interview with Mama feat. Antonella', by Kimmo Leijala, EmotionZine, 7 July 2023
  27. ^ 'FIB chats: Antonella spills the tea on Mama ft. Antonella', by Holly-Beth Quinn, Fashion Industry Broadcast, 28 July 2023
  28. ^ Mama:_Love,_Motherhood_and_Revolution
  29. ^ 'Interview with Mama feat. Antonella', by Kimmo Leijala, EmotionZine, 7 July 2023
  30. ^ 'Singer's new music inspired by the love of Wolverhampton and the man who brought her here', by Paul Jenkins, Express & Star, March 30 2024
  31. ^ 'First ever single by Wolverhampton music producer turned singer attracts over 30,000 Spotify hits', by Deborah Hardiman, Express & Star, 26 August 2023
  32. ^ 'Mama ft. Antonella drops debut single 'I Want What I Want', by Holly-Beth Quinn, Fashion Industry Broadcast, 23 June 2023
  33. ^ 'I Want What I Want video by Mama ft. Antonella', YouTube, 7 July 2023
  34. ^ 'Real Girl, by Mama ft. Antonella', retreved 9 June 2024

Category:2022 establishments in England Category:English indie rock groups Category:English rock music duos Category:Musical groups established in 2022