Folk-pop twin a Civil Wars will title a T-Mobile Presents Google Music Series, a fibre of gigs during a TAO Nightclub in Park City, Utah during this year’s Sundance Film Festival. The Civil Wars will perform on Monday, Jan 23rd with support from Feather and Belle. Bad Rabbits and Fort Lean will play on Jan 20th, Vintage Trouble and a Whigs on Jan 21st and G-Side and Chancellor Warhol on Jan 22nd.
This won’t be a Civil Wars’ initial knowledge personification during a prestigious film festival. “We had a smashing time [at Sundance] final year,” thespian and guitarist John Paul White tells Rolling Stone. “We saw some good cinema and aged friends, met some new friends and whiskeys. We entirely enjoyed personification a ASCAP theatre with other artists we unequivocally dig. It creates clarity that we would suffer a festival – there’s a certain reciprocity to what we do as eccentric artists. The perspectives are a same. It’s inspiring.”
The duo, who recently available a strain with Taylor Swift for a stirring Hunger Games soundtrack, have a longstanding seductiveness in film music. “I had – and still have – a lot of favorite soundtracks,” says White. “I fell defunct roughly each night as a child to a Sense and Sensibility soundtrack. we also owned a Braveheart soundtrack, and we remember being changed by how a song blended so ideally with a film. It done me wish to measure a film one day.”
White was also a large fan of a soundtracks for Empire Records, Forrest Gump, Reality Bites and Garden State. “All of those soundtracks were on solid revolution after saying a films,” he says. “Nowadays, The Hours soundtrack by Philip Glass and Yann Tiersen’s soundtrack for Amelie, as good as Clint Mansell’s soundtrack for The Fountain, have been personification mostly in my house.”
Though Civil Wars are still compelling their debut, Barton Hollow, White has his mind on recording a follow-up soon. “Hopefully we hang to a guns and make a record with one criteria – appreciative ourselves,” he says. “The usually thing we can control is either we like it or not. We have to let a chips tumble where they might when it comes to other opinions of it.”





