Introducing…Dove Armitage
Dove Armitage, the alias of the Los Angeles-based songwriter Quincy Larson, has a message for you… befriend your demons.
Today, she announces her new EP, “Concernless”, out November 3rd via KRO Records. Being a multi-disciplinary artist, Dove has played bass in Yungblud, and in Death Valley Girls and she also played synth on “Perfectly Not Close To Me” by WILLOW feat. Yves Tumor. “Concernless” features co-productions by icons Liam Hall (grandma) and Chris Greatti, and it’s announcement comes alongside a music video for the EP’s lead single, the stadium-ready “Brittle.” The song initially invites listeners in with Dove’s ethereal yet haunting vocals before it explodes into madness with the introduction of its glitchy and raucous chorus.
On the single, Dove shares, “‘Brittle’ was the first track created for this collection of songs with my dear friend Liam Hall (Grandma). The song is about longing for someone, or something, that is equally as good for you as it is bad for you. It speaks to the contradictions and juxtapositions of these things and explores how so many feelings or things are not always mutually exclusive and can occupy the same space. ‘Brittle’ ended up shaping and inspiring the entire collection of songs and the attitude of how myself, Liam, and Chris Greatti went into the following sessions creating the EP; have fun with it and make something honest.” Listen/share “Brittle” here and watch the video, directed by Lazy Eye here:
On the music video for “Brittle,” Dove explains, “The video plays with these themes as well and was filmed in the same way; no expectations and very few references. We knew only that we were shooting content, without expectation of an entire video, but it all came together just as perfectly as the song did. We had fun and created what we felt was honest. When we looked back at the footage, it was too cohesive to deny that this was the full video for ‘Brittle.’”
The EP was built around Dove’s favorite instrument, the bass, and each song hones in on the lyrical themes that Armitage says arrived by accident. “I want to befriend the darker parts of me. You hear so much about expelling your demons, but maybe you should focus on befriending them because they’re not going to go away,” she explains. First track “Brittle” rightfully begins with the interplay of synth and bass before shuffling drums and Armitage’s haunting vocals. There’s a sense of mystery during the song’s first verse, but the songwriter’s use of digital vocal effects and hyperpop-inspired aesthetics give the song a raucous, stadium-ready energy. “Let go of my hand a little, your touch makes my bones go brittle,” she sings.
Dove’s philosophy on this EP is to embrace the scary moments and the darkness that exists in each of us. It’s this vulnerability in admitting two sides to herself that eventually led to her alter-ego as Dove Armitage.
“I like these two people. They’re both me and they both reflect my inner workings. I would say Quincy is the bubbly one. Dove is the darker one,” she explains. It was her decision to embrace her darker side and harness this energy in a positive way that infuses so much of Concernless. “I started letting my demons teach me rather than ignoring them because they’re just going to be there and want my attention. I might as well give them attention, but do so in a positive way.”
Ultimately, the project is a response to Dove’s surroundings, and the struggles that impact her and her community. “I address negativity by acknowledging it, but then figuring out how I can spin it in a positive way. The things we go through as humans, as women, as queer people, suck, but they can make us better, too,” she explains. “How can we acknowledge these experiences without belittling them, to live and thrive regardless of those challenges?” It‘s an all-consuming question, and one Dove Armitage never fully answers on Concernless. That, however, is besides the point. Her bravery in acknowledging them, in understand them, and asking them gives “Concernless” it’s inspiring, unending power.
Featured Image Credit: Sarah Pardini