ANCHR Magazine

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Filtering by Tag: Camp Cope

ANCHR's Artist of the Day: Camp Cope

Camp Cope makes music first and foremost for themselves. Then maybe, as an inside joke, for all of us who have suffered at the hands of the patriarchy or all of us who have seen and held death up close. Though often galvanizing, the title of their most recent album How To Socialise and Make Friends (2018) later revealed to be the title of a man’s self help book, the more I listen to Camp Cope the less I hear their cheeky retorts and the more I hear the tenderness there. Of course they’re not here for Sensitive Indie Boy(™) . Maybe he’s being genuine when he suggests they change their bass frequency? He’s not like that. No. But Camp Cope are masters at seeing through bullshit and cutting to the meat of things. Their wittiness is baked into something bigger. I don’t know if lines like “hearing cat calls from police cars” are a symptom of being an observer or of being bold enough to sing about the sexism that becomes almost white noise by the time we are adults. Their production quality is always no frills, keeping it rough around the edges (which hints to an almost punk influence). This highlights frontperson Georgia Maq’s raw vocals and Kelly-Dawn Helmrich’s solidarity bass licks that sometimes function as musical eye rolls. Camp Cope will not take up less space physically or emotionally so that you can feel more comfortable. But it’d be an utter misread of their sound to describe the band as a sort of Kill The Patriarchy Girl Power matter. It’s a deep dive into experiences and people who have been taken from you or won’t let go (“I slept in the middle of my bed, with the comfort of my own choices”). Maq sings jaggedly about people who are defined by the full emotional impact they’ve made on her. There are fingerprints all over their tracks. There’s an anger and an acceptance. Camp Cope can feel empowering one moment and have you in tears the next (“sometimes making love is the only time I’d ever feel love, there was never any middle ground”). There is a deep self reflection when Maq is riding her bike to the hospital and understanding that humans are simply “flesh and electricity.” At times Camp Cope have an element of protection, like big sisters putting an arm around you and saying we’ve been there too. We want to put up with it so maybe you don’t have to. Camp Cope says “me too.” Not as much in the hashtag movement but in a way that they have seen it before and will walk with you through it- no matter what pain or relief it is. 

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