ANIMAL feels very defiant. Is it coming from a personal place?
“It’s kind of personal but also quite general – this kind of goes into what I was talking about with the internet and how everything has shifted from real-life experiences to online. I think a lot about people’s online identities versus their real-life identities, and how they overlap or how they contrast – how some things are true and some things are not. There’s this concept of all these different versions of us that live on the internet, and how people see different things about you based off this tiny glimpse. So that kind of sparked the initial feeling behind ANIMAL, which is about identity and people’s perception of you. And I think with those in the spotlight – artists, actors, politicians – people are really quick to dehumanise you and form an opinion about you, and they’re really quick to put their own projections and insecurities on you. And even in our friendships and relationships I think there’s versions of ourselves that exist to many different people, and I think a lot of people will hold you in whatever version of you suits them best – so at one time maybe you’re really shy, and that made someone feel confident or something. But now you’re not shy – you’re confident and you’re showing up – and it makes that person uncomfortable. That’s just an example, but I do think that we get held in a lot of people’s heads as things that we actually aren’t based off of whatever’s comfortable to someone else. ANIMAL is about challenging that, because I think it’s a disservice to both people. It challenges growth on both sides.”
What about ANYWHERE BUT HERE? It feels personal to you, but also something people are really going to relate to. What message do you want fans to take from it?
“It’s definitely rooted in this feeling of wanting to escape, which I think everybody has felt at this point. It’s rooted in escapism, and daydreaming, and just wanting to be transported out of your circumstances or your surroundings – especially nowadays. And I think this also happens because a lot is thrown in our faces online, and it’s really amplified and intense, and it feels like everything is kind of crumbling around us. I tried to paint this picture of that, and of the things that you see when you’re scrolling online – from news articles to people posting on their stories. It’s just this feeling of being surrounded by chaos and fear and a lot of darkness, and wanting to try to find peace – wherever that is for you. I thought about that a lot when I went in to write that song, and it was definitely a feeling that I was having. Nothing in the world felt normal at that point, and you have that realisation that nothing ever would be normal again – but also realising that that’s history. Things are always changing, and it makes you feel small in that sense, and you can kind of find peace in that while also finding it really scary. It was that feeling also combined with some family stuff happening, and seeing dynamics change – these things that used to be such comfort and safety also not really being that for me anymore. So it was all just this feeling of everything kind of falling away from me, and you just want to go somewhere that makes you feel safe for once. I had that feeling so many times during the pandemic, but especially after we got off tour and I started working on this new music – I was like, ‘I don’t know where I want to go anymore; there’s nothing that will make me feel comfortable, and that’s really scary.’ There were no places anymore that had that safety, and that was a really scary thing to be feeling now – I think a lot of people have had their safety blankets and their coping mechanisms really challenged.”
There’s so much going into both tracks in terms of their meaning – but in one word or phrase, how would you sum up this next era of PVRIS?
“I would say: dynamic, versatile, duality and contrast! There’s a lot of push and pull, there’s a lot of juxtaposition, and that dancing I described of organic versus inorganic, real life versus synthetic. That’s a big thing that I’ve been exploring visually and sonically, and I think lyrically, too: there’s a lot of push and pull between doom and joy, and hate and love. That’s always been there, but it’s definitely been embodied and explored in a lot of different ways this time around.”