If there’s one thing Folk Bitch Trio do well, it’s letting contradiction live in the same breath as clarity. Their music is intimate but expansive, emotionally raw yet often oddly comforting.
At its heart are three distinct voices – Jeanie Pilkington, Gracie Sinclair and Heide Peverelle – whose harmonies can shift from spectral to searing in an instant. Their debut album, ‘Now Would Be A Good Time’, is a deeply human document. It lingers in moments of discomfort, desire, miscommunication and humour, charting the invisible map of your early twenties with unnerving precision.
“We already had chemistry as friends,” says Jeanie. “So translating that into music felt very easy and organic. It clicked the first time we sang together as 17-year-olds.”
The trio, who met in high school in Naarm/Melbourne, have been singing together for over five years. The bond they’ve built first as mates, then as creative co-conspirators, is evident in the ease with which they finish each other’s thoughts and slip between harmonies. Their sound draws on the music they grew up with – gnarled Americana, lo-fi ballads, the occasional nod to classic rock and mid-2000s indie – but the result is something uniquely their own: minimalist, emotionally sharp and full of rich, if often quietly devastating, detail.
“We all play guitar and sing, usually in three-part harmony,” says Gracie. “There’s no real frontperson. It’s very collaborative; everything feels like equal parts of all of us.”
That sense of collectiveness shaped not only how they wrote the songs, but how they recorded them. The trio tracked the album in winter 2024 in Auckland with producer Tom Healy (Tiny Ruins, Marlon Williams), opting for tape to capture the warmth and imperfection of their live shows. The sessions were deliberately insular: misty days spent in the studio, pensive walks, quiet dinners at night. “The inside of all our brains was misty and quiet,” Jeanie recalls. “We lived together, made comfort food, watched movies in the evenings, and went to the studio all day.”
Gracie describes it even more bluntly: “We were all losing the plot a bit, being inside all day, living together, and tunnel-visioning in on making the record. But we wouldn’t have done it any other way.”
That atmosphere helped shape the album’s emotional arc. From the haunting opener ‘God’s A Different Sword’ to the quietly guttural ‘Sarah’ and the twitchy, disjointed yearning of lead single ‘Cathode Ray’, the songs trace a thematic throughline of restlessness, repression, and a desire to break out of one’s own body or circumstances.
“‘Cathode Ray’ is about feeling trapped in myself,” says Gracie, who wrote the song. “Wanting to break out so violently that I’m literally talking about opening up a body viscerally. It’s about frustration and knowing there’s no cheap thrill that’s going to fix that.”
“We were all losing the plot a bit, but we wouldn’t have done it any other way”
Themes of emotional containment and yearning echo throughout the album. On ‘Sarah’, the trio revisit a song written years earlier that required some careful handling when they returned to it in the studio. “It felt like we needed to resuscitate the song a little bit,” says Jeanie. “It took a lot of work to figure out how to not overexpose the earnest lyrics.”
The result is one of the most fragile and affecting moments on the record, proof that time doesn’t dull emotion but can offer new ways to explore it. And that reflective approach feeds into the record’s larger emotional palette. ‘Now Would Be A Good Time’ is full of internal contradictions: quiet songs that express loud feelings, funny lines in sad contexts, and moments of communal clarity born from private confusion.
“There’s a lot of pining and wishing you were somewhere or someone else,” Jeanie says. “A lot of frustration and repression in these songs.”
Those tensions are familiar to anyone navigating the strange liminal space of their twenties. The band don’t shy away from the pettiness, shame or doubt that characterise this stage of life. If anything, they lean into it. “Some of these songs began to come together when we were as young as nineteen or twenty,” Jeanie continues. “So much of the writing is us trying to figure out in real-time the navigation of early, fragile relationships and the petty grievances of being a touring musician in your early twenties.”
But despite the occasional sting of their lyrics, the process of making the record never became too heavy. Humour and heartbreak live side by side in Folk Bitch Trio’s world. “We try not to chase much,” says Jeanie. “When we’re in a room together we’re often not very serious, mostly cracking stupid jokes, and then we sing these often dark and sad songs of heartbreak. It’s always felt like the equilibrium for humour and stupidity to go hand in hand with vulnerability.”
That contradiction isn’t a gimmick; it’s part of what makes the band’s approach feel so lived-in and true. They aren’t constructing a persona. They’re letting themselves be seen – sometimes clearly, sometimes in a blur. And while their songs might feel introspective, they’re written with community in mind. “We wrote these songs with our shared connection in mind,” says Heide. “They were workshopped on tour, played to rooms full of people, shaped by that energy.”
“There’s a lot of pining and wishing you were somewhere or someone else”
Live performance has long been a key part of the band’s identity. Even before the album, they’d toured across Australia, Europe and the US, supporting artists like Alex G, Julia Jacklin and King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard. That time on the road not only sharpened their dynamic but also helped them connect with a growing audience that mirrors themselves.
This summer, they’re also set to play London’s All Points East alongside The Maccabees, marking another milestone in their evolving live journey. “It’s always very special to see ourselves in our audience,” says Jeanie. “Meeting young femmes who love the same music we do and who remind us of the 17-year-old baby musicians we were when we started FBT – that’s very gratifying.”
With their debut now here, Folk Bitch Trio are still processing what it means to have made something that feels both so personal and so open. “It feels like it’s telling the truth,” Jeanie says. “It sounds like an FBT show, and hopefully sounds like you’re right there in the room with us – amp buzz and chair creaks and all.”
The record might have started as a question, an attempt to figure things out in real time, but it lands with clarity and purpose. ‘Now Would Be A Good Time’ is not just an introduction to a band but a time capsule of a friendship, a process, and a shared musical vision. There’s no polish for polish’s sake, no pressure to posture. Just three people finding ways to tell the truth in harmony.
And as Jeanie puts it, they’re simply happy to be here. “With music to share with the world and songs to sing. It’s a special life.”
Folk Bitch Trio play All Points East on 24th August. Visit allpointseastfestival.com for tickets and more information. Their debut album ‘Now Would Be A Good Time’ is out 25th July.
Leave a Reply