Rachel Love Talks About Her Upcoming Reissues, New Band, and Learning from Grief and Loss

Rachel Love. Photo: Heather McClelland

You can’t leave the house these days without hearing some sloppy “A I” “music,” so having authentic music-makers like Rachel Love (solo, Railcard, Telecom, Dolly Mixture) has never been more urgently important. Her gentle touch when creating gorgeous pop music feels like an antidote to all the ugliness going on in the world.

She released two solo albums in the post-pandemic era that were woefully underheard and underappreciated, so it’s wonderful news that our old pals at Slumberland Records are reissuing both of them: Picture in Mind (2021) was co-produced with Rachel’s late husband, Steve Lovell (Blur, Julian Cope), who passed away the same year, and Lyra (2024), which is a tribute to Steve and was co-produced with their son David Lovell. Both are intimate, quiet and full of the sort of chemistry typically only witnessed among families.

Steve may be gone, but his spirit lives on in her music. “Losing Steve was a huge part of my need to be creative,” says Rachel, who was raised by classical violinist parents, and learned piano and cello growing up. “We were partners in every way.”

Rachel is definitely in a prolific era: In addition to these two albums, she is now in a band with Ian Button (Papernut Cambridge, The Penrose Web), Peter Momtchiloff (Heavenly, The Would-Be-Goods) and Allison Thomson called Railcard, whose first three EPs are collected and out now on Slumberland as well (a new album is coming later in 2026).

Gaylord Fields and I interviewed Rachel for chickfactor 19 (2022, on paper) but when Mike at Slumberland asked me to write a bio for the upcoming reissues, I interviewed her again and here is that interview. Interview by Gail O’Hara / photos courtesy of Rachel

US ORDERS
Monorail orders

Rachel at the Strong Rooms in Shoreditch November ’25. Photo: Chris Fassoms

Where all have you lived? How long have you lived in Brighton?
I was born in Wales, my dad taught at Aberystwyth University music department. When I was 5 we relocated to Cambridge as he got a new job there. I lived in London on and off from the age of 17 until I had my first baby at 22 with Captain Sensible. We lived in Croydon with his parents until the summer of 1985 when we moved to Brighton. After 8 years we moved to the countryside just outside, Captain moved back to Brighton in 1998 but I stayed in the same area and have been here ever since.

What is the local music scene like in Brighton? Where do you go to see music or play gigs?
There’s a thriving music scene in Brighton, all kinds of music. Two of my sons are in bands that play a lot. My youngest son David’s band ‘Telecom’ are very much part of the Brighton scene, they also are my band when I play live. There’s some great venues, the Prince Albert, the Hope and Ruin, the green door store, Alphabet, the folklore rooms to name a few.

Dolly Mixture (from left: Hester, Debsey, Rachel), 1981

Can you please name all the bands you’ve been in?
Dolly Mixture 1978–84
Sex Love Buster Baby 1994–96
Fruit Machine 1996–1999
The purple pudding clause (Spelt) with Steve (recording only) 2013–2021
The light music company (recording only) With Martin Newell 2022–2023
Rachel Love (with my boys and their friends) 2022–the present
Railcard with Ian Button and Pete Momtchiloff – 2025–the present

Have you continuously played music or taken breaks through the years?
I have taken breaks from playing and recording when my children were small, but I’ve always loved going back to it and now that they can play with me it’s fantastic! I joined a couple if Brighton-based bands in the ’90s and that’s when I met my husband, Steve, who signed Fruit Machine to his production company. We got married and had a baby (David) so I had another break from music. Steve and I played a lot of acoustic music together over the years, we wrote for guitar and cello, then as home recording got easier we started making albums. We made 3 before Steve encouraged me to write songs again, giving me an iPad and showing me how to use GarageBand.

I see you as a bit of a Prince type, someone who plays everything and does it all. How much of Picture in Mind was you and how much input was from the family? How many years of work went into that album?
Haha! Not exactly Prince! I can play a few instruments well enough to record. I learned the Piano and Cello as a child, guitar was self taught. The boys are very good guitarists and bass players so they played a bit on Picture in Mind. My husband Steve was a great guitarist too so he played on the record and did all the drum programming. I added loads of cellos and played keyboards. After loosing my parents and my brother I needed to write on my own again, I think I started Picture in Mind in 2019 and we recorded most of it in Lockdown, so it probably took around about a year altogether.

When we interviewed you for CF19 in 2022, you had already written all the songs for Lyra. Again, tell us about the songwriting and the process for each album and what went into it.
Lyra took a lot longer, I had to learn how to use logic and record myself. My eldest son Fred set me up with a laptop and the other boys helped me learn the programme. David was very much involved with the production side of it and Syd and David played guitar and bass. David’s bandmate Chris also added a bass line on Alone. It was a real journey reflecting all the changes in my life and the amazing support from my family. A lot of the songs formed or grew while I was out walking  my dog. I certainly wrote most of the lyrics whilst out on country walks.

My friend Heather came round one day while I was recording ‘Alone.’ She was very close to Steve so it felt right that she should sing some backing vocals which really adds to the emotion.

It was a very strange feeling when it was finished, it was so personal. The healing process of creating it seemed to be as important as sharing it.

Grief has obviously been a big part of your story in recent years. How did losing Steve change your relationship to making music?
Losing Steve was a huge part of my need to be creative. We were partners in every way, parents, musical partners and we worked in different jobs together as well. The hole he left was immense, of course for the whole family but for me it was my everyday life that had gone. I had to create a whole new one which I was also resistant to because it meant moving on without him.

David was also going through the stages of grief so it was probably hard for him to hear my songs but I think it inspired his song writing as well.

It seemed a really natural thing to play music with the boys, something they had grown up with and also a connection we share.

I recorded myself mostly, David would get home from work (tired) and I’d ask for help with something, sometimes just to to listen to what I’d be doing. He was a great support even when I’d done 20 more tracks of cellos and 100 more backing vocals for him to sort out! I’ve learnt so much by doing the album that I don’t have to rely on him now.

Your top records list for CF22 included Air, Stereolab, VU, Sufjan—would you add anything else to the list? Were you a Broadcast fan? These artists seem to inform the music you make and the feelings you create for your own solo albums.
There’s so much music I could add to the list. I didn’t really know much about Broadcast until recently. David played me some and I absolutely love it, particularly ‘Come on let’s go’ and ‘Before we begin’

How did making music factor into your family, especially with your own kids? Was it just something you always did as a family?
We share a lot of music with each other and love similar band, we were listening a lot to bands while making the album like Metronomy, Gwenno, El Perro del Mar and the Left Banke to name a few.  We both love the Would-be-goods and Lightheaded, who we went to see together. We’re both going to see Stereolab next month too. I listen to music from all sorts of different genres, I just love a good tune.

How has it been working with Slumberland? Have you known Mike for a long time?
I met Mike at the CF30 gig in London 2022. He’s been so great to work with, nothing’s ever a problem and he just knows the right thing to do.

What tools and tricks do you use in the studio or wherever you make music?
I’ve learnt to keep things a bit more simple and use real instruments and analog sounds a lot more. We made the whole album with a laptop and a mic, the only bit of fancy equipment being a Joe Meek vocal D I box that was my husbands. A lot of studio trickery was used in the recording, we had no way to record drums so we used beats from a farfisa drum machine and sampled snippets of David’s previous recordings to make the beats.

We went through a process of stripping back the layers of tracks and then re-recording or rewriting parts. When we were finished they sounded completely different to how they started. We even made dance versions at one point! It’s hard to remember how we achieved some sounds as we went through so many versions.

Railcard: Ian, Rachel, Allison and Peter

Where do you write? Do you begin with lyrics or the other way round?
I’ve always written the music first, but since meeting Ian Button and forming Railcard, he mostly sends me lyrics and l’ve really enjoyed writing music to them, it’s a very different way of thinking but I love it. We’ve written together in other ways too, just going for walks and something will trigger an idea and maybe a couple of lyrics, then go home and the song will start to form music and lyrics together.

What has a life of music making taught you? There is a warmth and chemistry on these records that is really special and intimate. I’m so happy they’re getting reissued.
I’m quite an introvert so a life of music has taught me that I’m very privileged to be able to write music that people will listen to. It’s the way I connect with people best, it’s my way of expressing myself.

What kind of package will there be for the reissues? Formats? etc.
The albums will both be released on Vinyl and be available on CD as well.

Are there other albums coming together in the future? Tour plans?
Railcard will be releasing more music, we’ve written a lot of songs, Pete too,  we record when we can and do a lot at home too. We’ve got a few gigs lined up so hopefully we’ll play lots more. I’m still playing as Rachel Love with David’s band Telecom. Gigs aren’t that regular as the boys have a lot of other commitments but they want to go on playing with me as well. We are doing some gigs with them supporting too.

Feb 21 Railcard at the Water Rats, London supporting Would-Be-Goods and Helen McCookerybook
March 5 Rachel Love at Dublin Castle, Camden With the Groovy Arts club band and Telecom
April 5 Rachel Love at Wales Goes Pop
May 16 Rachel Love at Betsey Trotwood with Keiron Phelon and the peace and Telecom
August 7 Rachel Love at The Albert, Brighton With Exploding Flowers
August 8 Rachel Love at The Waiting room, Stoke Newington With Exploding Flowers
August 9 Railcard at The Betsey Trotwood With the Corner Laughers
Related stories:
Railcard: Peter, Ian, Rachel

Lyra
originally released April 26, 2024
David Lovell – drums, bass and guitar
Syd Bor- bass and guitar
Chris Gibbons- bass on Alone
Heather McClelland – additional backing vocals on Alone
Co produced by Rachel and David Lovell
Mixed and Mastered by David Lovell
All songs by Rachel Love
Artwork & Design by Jodie Lowther
For Steve 

Picture in Mind
originally released October 29, 2021
All songs: Rachel Love except
‘Down The Line’ Bor/Smith/Wykes (Copyright Control/Copyright Control/Wardlaw Music)
All instruments Rachel Love (nee Bor)
Except: Syd Bor Bass ‘Down The Line’ & ‘Far Away’
David Lovell: Backing Vocals & Guitar ‘Primrose Hill’
Steve Lovell: Various Guitars, Instruments and Programming
Produced by: Rachel Love & Steve Lovell for Lovell The Dog Productions Mixed: Steve Lovell
Mastered: Steve Power
all rights reserved

New interview with Would-Be-Goods plus tips for songwriters from Jessica

Would-Be-Goods in Paris, Sept. 2025. Photo: Ian Greensmith

Happy release day to WOULD-BE-GOODS! 
When Peter Momtchiloff interviewed Jessica Griffin for chickfactor 13 in Y2K, we wonder if he knew he would become partners with Jessica in music and life? Either way, we are happy the Would-Be-Goods restarted as a live and recording pop group in the early 2000s and have played at many of our events, releasing a number of fantastic (albeit) underheard albums on the Santa Barbara label Matinee Recordings. During the pandemic, Jessica wrote a song a day clocking in at 173 songs in total, and just today the wonderful Tears Before Bedtime has been released on vinyl and CD via Skep Wax Records. The current lineup of Would-Be-Goods is Jessica Griffin, Peter Momtchiloff (Heavenly, Railcard), Debbie Greensmith (the Headcoatees), and Andy Warren (Monochrome Set, Adam and the Ants).

Out today! On Skep Wax Records – available via Jigsaw in the US

chickfactor: Is it just me or did the entire UK media just discover the Would-Be-Goods? BBC radio! How does it feel to finally get some press in your home country? It’s about time!!
Jessica Griffin: It’s exciting but also a bit strange. It takes me back to the él Records days, when the Would-be-goods got quite a lot of media attention in the UK (although I think we sold more records in other parts of the world).

The upcoming tour dates seem like the biggest tour you’ve done in ages or ever. Are you excited to hit the road?
Very. I’m a travelling player at heart, and I love being on the road with the band. We’ll be doing shows in parts of the country we’ve never played in before, as well as going back to some of our favourite places. (I’m thinking of Glasgow…)

You became incredibly prolific during the pandemic, writing 170 songs or something. Did that carry on? How regularly do you sit down to write? Do you have a schedule or ritual? Where does it happen?
I’d have carried on happily but after 173 songs I thought it was time to take a break and release some of them as EPs on Bandcamp. That meant doing quite a bit of work on the original demos to turn them into something I felt happy about sharing. It’s hard to keep switching between editing mode and writing mode—one requires tight focus, the other needs the opposite.

I haven’t done much songwriting since then as we wanted to finish the studio album. Then I had to sort out the artwork, make videos, do interviews and so on. But I’m sure I’ll start writing songs again soon—the melodies that come into my mind (especially when I’ve just woken up) are becoming rather insistent! I’ll probably use the same strategy as I used for my song-a-day project, i.e. sleeping on a title and giving myself a tight deadline to finish the song. I usually write them in my head as I’m pottering round the house or walking around the neighbourhood, stopping to record my ideas as voice memos. I get quite a lot of the lyrics this way but at some point I have to write them out so I can look at them and see what needs changing. Then I make a rough demo on Garageband with a programmed drum track and a guitar track.

Jessica, London, 2025.

 How was recording this album different from previous ones?
It took much longer, not only because of the pandemic but also because other members of the band were busy and Debbie now lives some distance away. It wasn’t easy to find times when we could all get together to practise and record the songs.

We approached recording in a different way this time. Usually we’d put down guide guitar (to a click track) and guide vocals, then we’d record the instruments and vocals in layers, starting with bass guitar and drums, but for this album the whole band went into the live room and Jon recorded us playing the song together. We’d do a couple of takes to make sure we had good bass guitar and drum tracks. Other guitars, vocals and overdubs would usually have to be redone or added afterwards. This way of recording captures more of the energy of the band, I think.

Another difference is that I recorded most of my vocals at home, something I learned to do during my lockdown project. I’m more relaxed when I’m singing on my own and the result is more intimate, which people seem to like.

Would-Be-Goods in Paris, Sept. 2025. Photo: Ian Greensmith

How has band activity changed since Mr. Momtchiloff retired?
Peter’s new-found freedom meant we could finish the album more quickly, as he was now free to go into the studio with me on weekdays. He’s been very busy with his other bands too, recording albums with Heavenly and Railcard. 

What kind of potions or elixirs do you use to soothe your singing voice?
I don’t have any secret formulas! Hoarseness hasn’t been a problem for me since I took some classical singing lessons and learned how to support my voice properly, using my abdominal muscles. (I was surprised to learn that I’m actually a soprano, although I don’t tend to use the upper part of my range for the Would-be-goods.) The only potion I drink is tea, which isn’t the best thing for the voice as it’s quite acidic. I make sure I drink plenty of water the day before I have to sing, I never drink alcohol before a show and I’ve never smoked. 

Let’s talk ageism. You are at the top of your game like many women of a certain age so why does society treat us all as if we are invisible?
I don’t know. The older women musicians I know are far from invisible—they get plenty of appreciation and respect. I’ve always had good examples of strong older women in my life and make a point of seeking out good role models now.

What’s on your reading table? What art shows have topped your list lately?
I’m reading ‘The Art Cure’ by a London-based academic who has spent her life studying the effects of making and experiencing art (including music, dance, all forms of visual art, and more) on our minds and bodies. It makes you realise how short-sighted it is of governments to make cuts in the arts as if they’re a luxury, when they really are fundamental to our happiness and wellbeing. 

Our last art show was ‘Radical Harmony’, an exhibition of neo-impressionist paintings at the National Gallery). What really stood out for me were Seurat’s drawings and the luminous portraits of Dutch-Indonesian artist Jan Toorop (who later went full Symbolist and became a massive influence on Gustav Klimt). 

Jessica in London, Brief Lives shoot, 2001. Photo: Gail O’Hara

Can you cook? What’s your specialty? Peter’s?
I’ve cooked since I was a small child – I think it’s an essential life skill. In those days it was mainly baking (bread, scones, cakes, etc) but now I make pretty much everything. Peter is a very good, instinctive cook but his New Year resolution was to cook from recipes. I gave him Fuchsia Dunlop’s book on Sichuanese cooking for Christmas and he is working his way through that (to my great delight). 

Any new cats on the horizon?
Jessica: I’m very tempted but my last cat had health problems which stopped me from travelling for years. I want to enjoy a bit of freedom before succumbing again.
Peter: I’ve told her she can get another cat when she’s 70.

If we came to your neighborhood for one day, what should we do?
I’d recommend a stroll along Golborne Road and the north end of Portobello Road. There are still some interesting independent shops, cafés and restaurants. Further north, next to Regent’s Canal, there’s a lovely little place called Meanwhile Gardens, created many years ago on waste land by volunteers. A walk eastwards along the canal towpath up to Little Venice is a nice thing to do on a sunny day. Portobello Road on a Saturday is much too crowded for me but if you go during the week, I’d recommend popping into Books for Cooks on Blenheim Crescent, a specialist cookery book shop which has a test kitchen at the back, serving very good-value lunches from Tuesday to Friday. (Get there well before 12 and be prepared to queue outside!) There’s a lovely little Swedish bakery, Fabrique, on Portobello Road, and a good Malaysian restaurant called Makan under the Westway flyover. 

Would-Be-Goods. Photo: Mike Jones

Who is the comedian in the Would-Be-Goods?
Peter, Debbie and Andy are all very funny. Andy loves word play (especially puns and anagrams) and all three are good at witty ripostes. I don’t have that quick wit in conversation – I can only think of the perfect come-back long after the moment has passed.

Talk us through your stagewear protocols.
It’s usually a last-minute decision: ‘stripy or black?’ We branched out at last year’s Paris Popfest and wore black trousers with white shirts. I thought we looked rather chic but one French reviewer said Debbie and I (who both wear glasses these days) looked like kindly librarians from a fictional English country village. Actually, that’s not a bad look. 

What’s it like being on Skep Wax?
It’s great. I don’t think there can be a label that is more enthusiastic about its artists and bands and which works harder to get their music out there. I think being veteran indie musicians themselves gives them a huge advantage. 

Jessica in London, Brief Lives shoot, 2001. Photo: Gail O’Hara

What is your favorite London pub and why?
Jessica: It would have to be the Betsey Trotwood in Clerkenwell, epicentre of the London indie scene. The owner and staff create a friendly, relaxed atmosphere, the beer is good (I’m told), and the ground-floor bar is the perfect setting for informal afternoon gigs as well as the occasional party. 

Peter: I also like the Lexington of course, the musical hub of London. A fine old-fashioned pub for social drinking, if there are not too many of you, is the King Charles I in King’s Cross. And in young people’s London, I think of two pubs which are great music venues but also great for a social: the Cav in Stockwell and the Victoria in Dalston.

Do you pay attention to popular music? If so, any songs you enjoy? Or other bands/albums by anyone currently?
Jessica: These days I don’t get to hear much new music unless it’s by bands and artists we know in real life. It’s not that I’m not interested – I keep meaning to listen to the radio more but I go to bed very early these days.

Peter: Strangely, my two favourite albums of last year were by men from Kent: the High Span and the Penrose Web.  I also liked Baxter Dury’s record and, getting a bit closer to Chickfactor territory, Former Champ from Glasgow, whose melodic punch and conciseness reminded me of a less lairy Guided by Voices.

Would-Be-Goods tour dates:
Feb. 21: The Water Rats, London
Feb. 25: The Just Dropped In, Coventry
March 5: Ramsgate Music Hall, Ramsgate
April 3: The Gate Arts & Community Centre, Cardiff
May 29: The Central Bar, Gateshead
May 30: Glad Café, Glasgow

Early Would-Be-Goods

10 tips for budding songwriters by Jessica

1. Feed your mind. Read – not just contemporary fiction. Listen to music from different times and places. Watch old films. Go to art galleries. Everything you experience will combine and ferment and something strange and new will come of it.

2. Keep a notebook of words and phrases that appeal to you – the title of an old film, a chapter heading in a book, a fragment of a poem, a scrap of conversation you’ve overheard. Take the notebook to bed, pick something out before you turn off the light, and sleep on it. Your brain will get to work on it overnight. 

3. Try different ways of sparking musical ideas. Strumming chords on a guitar or piano doesn’t work for everyone. Try taking an intro from an old song and imagining a different course it could have taken, or borrow a bar of a melody and see what you can make from it. 

4. Make yourself write a song every day for a month. It can be a very simple song, even a silly song – it doesn’t matter. The important thing is just to produce something. It’s the best antidote to perfectionism, which leads to writer’s block.

5. Don’t have rigid ideas about the sort of songs you should (or shouldn’t) be writing. Accept whatever comes up and work with it. 

6. When you’re in songwriting mode, go for long walks by yourself. A large park is ideal but city streets are just as good. (Take care when crossing, though!)  I find the rhythm of walking helps my thoughts flow.

7. Record all your ideas, no matter how small: snippets of melody on a voice memo, a line or two of lyrics in a notebook. You think you’ll remember them later but you won’t. This applies especially to ideas that come to you first thing in the morning when you’re half asleep, which are sometimes the best.

8. Sing your lyrics aloud from time to time as you write them – what sounds good to your inner ear might sound clumsy when you’re actually singing it.  

9. Be careful about who you play your songs to, especially when you’re just starting to write. It can be discouraging if the response is lukewarm, or if they love what you’ve written, you may find yourself writing to please them rather than yourself. 

10. Never compare your songs to other people’s. It can discourage you, or lead you astray. Just keep doing what you do and feeding your mind, and your songwriting will get better. 

Would-Be-Goods circa 2004 (Peter, Jessica, Debbie and Lupe Núñez-Fernández) in London, Brief Lives shoot, 2001. Photo: Gail O’Hara

Tears Before Bedtime – out today! 

01 The Gallopers
02 Dr Love
03 Tears For Leda
04 The Back Of Your Bike
05 The Tears Of Cora Pearl
06 The Rose Tattoo
07 Don’t Come Crying To Me
08 Witch Hazel
09 Old Flame
10 Carmilla
11 The Bride Wore Black
12 Madame X
13 Away With The Fairies
14 The Moon Doesn’t Mind