

Is there anything about the project that you think might surprise people? We were so creatively fuelled and really wanted to just let everything out. I obviously went on tour with the ‘75 boys prior to that - we didn’t hang out as much but we always talked about wanting to work together. It was honestly the most wholesome musical experience I’ve ever had. “So when Bea said she wanted to do something that feels like an action movie, that stuck out in my head.”Ĭongrats on the EP, Bea! You made it last summer with Matty and George, right? What was the mood like at the time?
#Fast and sexy magazine videos movie
“We like making music videos that feel like movie trailers and I’d been thinking for a while about this idea of a group of friends who travel from place to place, robbing parties and posing as a touring band,” Alex told i-D. At four tracks long, the EP is a confident and concentrated shot of everything she was feeling last July - a reluctance to grow up, a draw to seek validation in others and a preoccupation with unhealthy vices - as well as the ultimate bridge between Fake It Flowers and album two, which she assures us is on the way.Īny minute now though, Bea will be putting out Our Extended Play, along with an action-packed music video for the powerful and honestly pretty sexy “Cologne”, directed by British duo The Rest aka Lewis Levi and Alex Motlhabane. It was the first time Bea had opened up her intimate songwriting process to outside influence the first time she had the space to experiment with new sounds. The project is the result of a summer spent locked down together in the Oxfordshire countryside. We called because today she’s releasing her new EP, Our Extended Play, a collaboration with Matty Healy and George Daniel of The 1975 from which she shared the Covid-centric lead single “ Last Day On Earth” at the end of March. Efforts to control mink populations, and to prevent further human interference like commercial fishing and corporate dam construction, are just a few small steps toward saving one of nature’s more theatrical species.But we didn’t call one of the most successful young musicians in the world right now to talk about her new hat. They’ve wreaked havoc on the birds ever since. A few minks escaped from traders by accident, and flourished without predatory competition. American minks were introduced to Patagonia during the height of mink-fur’s popularity in the 1930s, and the invasive species has become enemy #1 for grebes. It is estimated that only 400 mate-pairs remain. Hooded grebes are critically endangered, and their numbers have been on the decline year after year. Critical StepsĪs wild and whimsical as these mating rituals may seem, those involved are actually in a grave predicament. According to the report released by BirdLife International, suitors with more rhythm, stamina and coordination tend to fare better than those who, well, flap to their own beat. So aside from earning attention from prospective mates, these showdowns also allow the birds to critique each other's choreography in an attempt to find the fittest partners-those with the sickest moves. As it turns out, grebes are rather picky when it comes to choosing their partners. The birds’ dancing rituals include rigorous displays of head banging, sporadic diving and some pretty intense stare-downs, but showmanship is only one aspect of these passionate performances. Though they tend to keep to themselves, footage of them is incredibly rare, and what was just recently released is quite revealing, to say the least.

Not much is known about the hooded grebe, Podiceps gallardoi, as these aquatic birds were discovered only 43 years ago in the frigid waters of Patagonia. And lucky for us, we now have it on film. These endangered freshwater divers have a mating ritual that is not only extremely intricate, but also highly entertaining. Love is a battlefield, and in the case of the hooded grebe, that battle takes place on the dance floor.
