EXCLUSIVE VIDEO PREMIERE: KiKi Holli – “More Than This” (Roxy Music Cover)


Music has a great way of healing, especially in light of the last few years filled with tragedy the world over. Los Angeles artist KiKi Holli has shared an incredible new single and video for her cover of the Roxy Music classic “More Than This.” The synth-pop classic track was from the band’s final album Avalon, and with Holli’s captivating voice takes what could have been a risky chance on a cover to a bold choice and a memorable performance. Previous to releasing this single, Holli also co-wrote and starred in Forever Dusty, a stage musical based on the life of British pop star Dusty Springfield. “More Than This” was produced by Ethan Allen (Black Rebel Motorcycle Club, Tricky, Throwing Muses), the new animated video was created by Emmy-winning cartoonist Dean Haspiel (HBO, Marvel, DC) and you can check it out now!

 

KiKi Holli commented:

“I had a couple really important people pass in my life recently,” Holli says, “and one was pretty devastating. It leaves you baffled, in a way. Especially when it’s the first really big death in your life. When somebody’s soul passes like that, I think there’s a shamanic aspect to it that leaves you half in this world and half in the other. If you’re open to it, I think you can connect to that other side, whatever that is for you.”

 

At the height of her grief, Holli—the Los Angeles-based singer, songwriter, musician, actress and playwright—was soothing her soul listening to a whole lot of Roxy Music, Avalon in particular. She decided that she really connected with and wanted to record her own version of the album’s hit single, Bryan Ferry’s “More Than This.”

 

“Other people have covered it—10,000 Maniacs, Blondie—but it hasn’t been in the zeitgeist for a while,” Holli says. “I like the idea of a song having a life of its own beyond the original—that it keeps living and being reborn. With my own take, I wanted to remind people that there’s always a place to turn when you’re in pain. And that’s what ‘More Than This’ was for me. It was healing.

 

In Roxy Music’s video for the song, Holli points out, there is white light shining through a cross, but also fire—Heaven and Hell, yin and yang. “That really resonated with me,” she says. “When you’re grieving for someone, there’s also this really poignant love present. The more grief you experience, the more you loved that person, the deeper your connection to them. You feel so much pain, but you also realize that life goes on, that death is a transition, that there really is more than this—more than this tangible physical world, more that comes after it. The spiritual content of the song was very enticing to me.”

 

Holli recorded “More Than This” with producer Ethan Allen (Throwing Muses, Tricky, Black Rebel Motorcycle Club) at his studio in L.A.’s Silver Lake neighborhood. The involvement of Allen—who was mentored by legends Daniel Lanois and Brian Eno—provides a direct link in the chain back to Roxy Music. “Ethan and I get along like a house on fire,” Holli says. “He lives around the corner from me, just a five-minute walk, which is amazing. When I met him a few years ago, he was also going through a challenging time in his life, so we connected in that way. He’s super cool, very humble, kind—the type of person you dream of working with. When I have ideas, Ethan always listens carefully, and he really takes the time to explain the recording process, so while you’re in the studio you also get an education. Plus, he’s got a ton of vintage gear, and he knows what he’s doing with it!”

 

In addition to being a trained vocalist with a powerful, emotive presence and warm, resonant voice, Holli is a songwriter and guitarist with a slew of new singles in the works. She also grew up playing saxophone and viola, has appeared on stage in the plays Of Mice and Men, Three Sisters and Twelfth Night, and also landed the lead role in the Rocky Horror-channeling indie film Isle of Lesbos, celebrated by Swampflix as “a politically angry, deliberately offensive, post-John Waters, queer-as-f*ck movie musical with deep roots in drag & cabaret traditions.”