Kelsey Lu on Dirt, Diotima, Deluxe Dreams, and Their New Album, ‘So Help Me God’


The world of Kelsey Lu’s sophomore album, So Help Me God, is rich—not only sonically, threaded as it is with their characteristic lyricism (from the opening track, “Reaper”: “Can’t take a sin from a sinning man / It’s not my burden, it’s in your hands / You are the reaper left to decide / What you want, baby? I’m not your guide”), but also visually, using film and visual art to build out its storytelling.

To mark its release, the 35-year old spoke to Vogue this week about collaborating with Kim Gordon, “Liza Minnelli wigs,” and taking musical inspiration from Céline Sciamma’s Portrait of a Lady on Fire.

Vogue: What’s been the biggest difference for you between releasing Blood seven years ago and putting So Help Me God out now?

Kelsey Lu: I feel like I’ve grown so much into myself in terms of knowing what I want and don’t want, and building my intuition, and also probably less toxic relationships than I had at that time—as well as less of a toxic relationship with myself.

There are some amazing featured artists on this album. What was it like working with Kamasi Washington and Kim Gordon?

Yeah, it was great. I met Kim Gordon back in 2017 when she saw me perform in LA. She came up to me afterwards, and then years later, when I was recording the album in LA with Eve Rossman, I went to see her play at Zebulon and I went up to her being like, “Do you remember me?” And she did! I asked her to come in the studio, and she did. She connected to this cello composition that I made that is not on the album fully; it’s in the film, and it’s in some of the visuals that I’ve been putting out, but it was a cello composition that I made one day when I was really frustrated in the studio. I was not happy with the day, and then I just made this really nicely boisterous cello track, and when she came through, I was playing her songs in my album. Each artist featured, Kamasi and Kim and Sampha, I have such a history with them. I also have Miguel Atwood-Ferguson, who does the strings on “Better Than That,” and my sister playing violin. They’re all tethered to memory, in a way. I met Sampha when I was recording Blood; he was my gateway into London. One of my first shows in London was on a split bill with Kamasi and Sampha, and it’s so nice to have it all come together.



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