Categories
Indie/Indie Rock Pop/Indie Pop

Montoya, Forever Ago – Totally Wired Magazine, a Legacy

When I started Totally Wired Magazine in 2020 with friends Liam Lynch and Aimee Clarke (and later developed with Kylie Warrix), it began as nothing more than a fanzine and an excuse for us, inexperienced writers, to babble about the music we loved to whomever out there may be listening. Five years on, I can’t imagine life today without having been a part of it. Some of the most enduring friendships were formed, and even a romance was born from the people around the world who got in touch and said that they, too, were willing to give their time and enthusiasm to promote their favourite bands.

The website came to a natural end when its regular contributors went on to do bigger and better things. We decided to leave it up as a time capsule in the belief that music once shared could be rediscovered forever. I, for one, have many fond memories of the videos we made and the conversations had with many bands who were active at the time. Some of these bands are still around today, and some have become new creatures entirely.

In 2020, we published an article about the band Montoya. At the time, they were a group whose music was constantly on my yearly Spotify Wrapped. Whose EP I knew inside out, but who, like us, had moved on to their next venture. I was reminded of the impact our site had made when the band contacted me to announce that nearly ten years on from their last release, our article had brought them back together to record a long-awaited follow-up.

Forever Ago is the new EP from Montoya, a Paris-based band whose luminous sound is matched only by their visual charm. Their first EP inspired a longing for a time, a place, and friendships from another life lived. With their follow-up record and the making-of film Making Of Souvenirs, Montoya takes that sense of tender nostalgia even further, turning it into something almost tangible.

At the beginning of our magazine, I could never have hoped it would grow this far and touch so many people across the world. I want to say a big thank you to all the incredible people who have contributed across the years to promote independent music, and to Montoya (Cécilia Bonnet, Tom Shemesh and band) for sharing so much love and for fulfilling our belief that great music never dies.

Listen to the band’s full EP Forever Ago here.

Categories
Indie/Indie Rock

Hidden Gems: Montoya – On The Hill EP

Sometimes, bands will only stick around for a short time. They release an album, an EP or maybe just a single before dropping off the radar completely. But I don’t believe that should stop people from discovering and sharing the songs they made.

And sometimes, bands will even ‘break-through’ years after they’ve split. In the case of Indie-Pop band Montoya, they very well did.

I first discovered their EP ‘On the Hill’ after their one and only music video, directed by Damien Bonnaire, gave them big exposure on Vimeo back in 2016. Instantly gripped by their uplifting melodies and stunning vocals, I have since remained a loyal fan of Montoya and their charming sound.

The next few years, I very eagerly awaited to hear more tunes from the Parisian band, but it now seems that day may never come.

I read up on them recently, just to see what happened, only to find that their social media had gone quiet and their website had been taken down.

I reached out to them via email hoping to find some answers, but their mailbox no longer exists.

After some digging, I found the Instagram profile of the band’s guitarist, Hugo Rattoray, who told me the band had split due to each member’s prior commitments.

After years of hope, this was terribly sad to hear, especially from such a promising band, but an understandable reason nonetheless. Sadly one of the biggest reasons most bands today don’t last long is that at the end of the day, whether your music is good or not, you still have to pay the rent.

Unless you’re a student nowadays or have bundles of time on your hands, putting a band together and managing to hold down your life at the same time is more arduous now than at any point in the last 50 years.

Part of the reason so many great bands from the ’70s and ’80s were able to do so well (in the UK at least) was because at a time of such high unemployment, there was f*** all to do.

I worry now that after the recent pandemic, with so many venues being forced to close, that it may have become near impossible for small bands to get by. Not to mention with a sharp decline in job security, some people might see that time spent writing songs is not worth their while. It’s a shame when you imagine how much great music will be lost to the world because of this.

As for Montoya, I feel somewhat strange writing about a band whose music always ends up back on my playlist year after year, but who I hardly know anything about.

It was great chatting to Hugo, who assured me that the previous band members were all still working on their own solo projects, including singer Cécilia Bonnet, the incredible voice behind their songs. Montoya’s first EP will foreseeably be their last, but one I will certainly still be listening to for a long while to come – and who knows, maybe one day this group with so much talent will crop up again under a new name with more great tunes to give the world.

Listen to Montoya’s EP ‘On The Hill’ now.