By Tom Walsh
Jun 1, 2018 10:16
Pillow Queens are heading to Brighton for the fifth night of their tour when Cathy McGuinness’ phone buzzes. As the nondescript background of countryside and motorway flies by, she lets out a little yelp of joy causing the rest of the band to turn around. Two words sat next to the listing of their upcoming hometown show in Dublin - “sold out”.
“We all had a freakout in the van. I wasn’t expecting it at all,” McGuiness explains, still sporting a smile of disbelief. Before long, the band’s Twitter mentions are swamped with requests for spare tickets, their Facebook inboxes are filling up with friends asking whether they can nab a guestlist spot. Guitarist Sarah Corcoran was equalled overwhelmed: “We were all like, ‘wait, there’s more people that want to go?!’”.
It was the moment when Pillow Queens realised that this could be going somewhere and, naturally, it all began with a game of basketball. Blessed with an unusually sunny day in Dublin, Corcoran and future-bassist Pamela Connolly frantically scrolled through their phones to figure out whether anyone fancied a game of hoops.
“It was more of a ‘meet on the court, have a game and get shitfaced afterwards’,” Connolly laughs. Seeing the sunshine pierce the normally grey sky, the proposal peaked the interest of McGuinness and Rachel Lyons. A pulsating five minutes of exhausting basketball gives way to calls for the pub and as they chat over a mutual love of indie rock darlings Cloud Nothings and Yuck, a common consensus grows – “let’s form a band”.
In the space of 18 months, Pillow Queens have gone from a suggestion after a few pints to the new favourite band of BBC Radio 6 Music’s Steve Lamacq. Delighting audiences on both sides of the Irish Sea with their brand of uplifting indie rock delivered with an infectious energy and devastating lyrics, the accelerating upward trajectory has taken this fundamentally DIY band by surprise.
“People in the UK were coming up to us like ‘oh we heard you on Steve Lamacq, he thinks you’re great’ and were like ‘okay, I guess this is a big deal’,” Corcoran explains. “We then heard it on the radio for ourselves. We’re being played alongside bands we have loved for years. Then it hit home – this is huge”.
“[Lamacq] actually came to one of our shows in London,” Connolly adds. “Although none of us actually knew what he looked like because, you know, he’s a radio DJ. We were like 80 per cent sure it was him.”