Andy Zozulya— How did your experiences with sleep paralysis and insomnia influenced the album "Abyss"?
Chelsea Wolfe— I’ve experienced sleep paralysis since I was a small child, and the sleep and dream world have inspired me a lot over the years. For Abyss, I more intentionally channeled my experiences and perspectives from sleep paralysis, night terrors, and the inner realm into songs. On “After the Fall,” the phrase “Don’t let them win!” is something I heard in a dream when I was in my early 20’s, and as I wrote Abyss later I wondered if that was my current self sending encouragement to my past self during a tough time. A lot of the songs were based on dreams or nightmares I’d had, or recurring themes in my dream-world.
Could you share with our readers a story about Berlin and Friedrichschain in particular.
I went there at age 22 with a group of performance artists, my friend and great artist Steve Vanoni invited me along and we did a show in a creative space there. I would play a short set of songs at the end of all the performance art (sometimes joining in on the performance art as well). It was my first time in Berlin and I was just taken by how magical Friedrichschain felt to me.. I couldn’t really put my finger on what it was exactly. Maybe it was the little playgrounds - that encouragement for children to use their imaginations and play, it felt so different and nice compared to the US, where the arts aren’t really supported. So my young mind just wrote a little story about it.
What prompted you to embrace witchcraft, and how it affects your creative process?
Embracing witchcraft was like a remembering. I’ve always had witchy tendencies, and my grandmother passed down elements of witchcraft to me, but we didn’t have that name for it. Tarot was one of my first gateways into witchcraft as a personal spiritual practice, and I just kept learning from and communing with more witches and it became this really joyful, really healing thing for me. Witchcraft affects me creatively in a positive way, as I’ve learned tools like creating a container of sacred space for ritual that I can also apply to songwriting.
What is your favorite Tarot card? Do you have a favorite tarot set?
I always say The Hermit and The Star, which feel like the two contrasting sides of myself: the very introverted homebody who loves to spend time alone, writing and contemplating mysteries and magic, and the one who goes out into the world and somehow becomes comfortable sharing her music onstage with an audience (even though I know that’s far from the full meaning of either card!) I really love Kim Krans’ Archetypes oracle deck, and last year I enjoyed the Dark Wood tarot deck by Abigail Larson and Sasha Graham because it’s a shadowy deck, and I was doing a lot of shadow work. I usually stay with one deck for a long time until I feel intuitively that it’s time to move on or shift energies. In 2024 I’ve been using a more lighthearted deck because life feels heavy right now!