top of page
Dizzy - Barking Dog - Credit_ Boy Wonder.jpg

Dizzy

  • Youtube
  • TikTok
  • Black Facebook Icon
  • Black Twitter Icon
  • Black Instagram Icon

Katie Munshaw really needed to finish the fucking quilt, and find a way to sew herself into it. The lead singer of Ontario four-piece Dizzy has been thinking a lot about the way things look and the way you can find comfort in disappearing into it all. She describes the album, a bright indie-pop beast continuing the legacy built from two previous shimmering records, as a “patchwork quilt” with each song a square, or a sliver, of her life. “None of them have all that much to do with each other and yet they wouldn't exist without one another,” she says.

 

It makes for a colourful record that’s intrinsically Dizzy – one that swerves comparison, instead reflecting the shapeshifting and imperfect nature of its musicians. Avoiding the spotlight yet more confidently themselves than ever.

 

Two things fuelled the change in direction for Dizzy on their third record. The first is the elephant in the room, the Jane Doe on the cover, the striking mask Munshaw wears to lead Dizzy into the next chapter.  "When it was time to discuss visuals for the album I had serious anxiety about being on camera. I find it strange how musicians are often introverted people yet one of the largest parts of our job is visually selling ourselves to an audience. It feels unnatural to pine for strangers' attention to afford rent or whatever, and as someone who’s particularly sensitive it isn’t sustainable. To me the mask not only represents a calloused version of myself but it lends itself to an anonymity that I love,” she explains. “I like the idea of a female artist making the conscious decision to take her appearance out of the question for the audience.”

 

Another major shift for Dizzy was the location – it’s the first time the band stepped out of their comfort zone and recorded abroad, after spending a week in a cottage in Ontario and realising something wasn’t quite right. They joined their producer David Pramik, a “pop nerd” who could help them focus, and set up a home studio in a bungalow in LA for two weeks. “I was very, very against it at first,” Munshaw says.  But that push and pull, in finding new ways to better be yourself, is what makes this record the boldest and most authentic Dizzy era to date.

Dizzy

Dizzy

Dizzy
Ruined by Adrianne Lenker

Ruined by Adrianne Lenker

01:01
Play Video
Tour kicks off this weekend. Tickets on sale now

Tour kicks off this weekend. Tickets on sale now

00:14
Play Video
My first and only love song

My first and only love song

00:27
Play Video
bottom of page