Finom Give Their 10-Year Chemistry a New Name
Sima Cunningham and Macie Stewart discuss the change from Ohmme to Finom, working with Wilco bandleader Jeff Tweedy, and their latest record, Not God.
Photo by Anna Claire Barlow
A decade ago, Sima Cunningham and Macie Stewart embarked on a journey together to explore what they could create in a world outside of their classically trained past. The Chicagoans knew how to mold their voices together in a powerhouse vocal combination—not as a duet but a pair of individual voices complimenting each other in a boisterous melody. All they needed was the freedom to make some noise, so they looked to the electric guitar—an instrument neither musician was trained on—to push the limits of their sound and create space for artistry rather than going into auto-pilot on instruments that they know all the intricacies of by heart.
Throughout their 10 years together, Cunningham and Stewart have performed as Homme and Ohmme, and now, due to an unwinnable legal battle and an effort to find a name that is uniquely theirs, they are Finom. “Every weird band name combination that you can think of already exists somewhere in the internet universe,” Cunningham says about choosing their new identity. “So, it took a while, but we wanted it to be an evolution of our name. As Finom, we have reached our biggest selves—our peak powers.” She and Stewart joke about how their most recent bio states that they pledged allegiance to each other at the bottom of a volcano. Yet, that hyperbolic image of danger and trust is the perfect metaphor to describe the powerhouse group, and it plays out meteorically on their latest album, Not God.
Finom’s new name may signify a new chapter, in a sense, but the musicians maintain what drew them to each other in the first place: a mutual respect for each other’s art. “We started this band because we loved each other’s songwriting, and we were both open to exploring what we could do with electric guitar and our voices,” Stewart recalls. The pair wanted to stay true to their past work, yet their new moniker offered an opportunity to reinvent themselves if they wanted that change. Since the duo’s album Fantasize Your Ghost was released in 2020, so much has shifted for the indie rockers since then. “We’ve grown to know each other more and learned to trust each other more. So the music we’re making is more tightly interwoven,” Stewart beams.
A critical part of Finom’s work together is improvisation. Since Cunningham and Stewart grew up with such rigid musical backgrounds, their collaborative project was galvanized through experimenting with sounds in ways they never could before. “Improvisation is, at its heart, communication—communicating without words. When we’re improvising with each other, we’re following a flow and listening to the other person,” Stewart explains. “When you’re coming up with things, you can always choose how you respond to them and integrate them into your playing. Something significant to us is to have this aspect of improvisation to keep imagination alive in our music.”
That imagination and desire to play is prevalent in “As You Are,” where the dual guitar parts mimic the striking layered quality of the pair’s individual vocals. Through their experimentation, Cunningham and Stewart evoke a free, childlike wonder when working together. “It’s like dancing, right? Because you want to be in tandem but then break away and leave space to do your own performance,” Cunningham describes. “In our music video for ‘As You Are,’ I was trying to connect with the spirit of when children play in parallel. Maybe they imitate each other, but sometimes they’re really synced up. Then they drift apart from each other, and they learn to do new things. And it’s this beautiful dance that they’re doing together.”
Throughout all of this improvisation—and Cunningham and Stewart’s solo work away and tenures in other groups—Finom has fine-tuned the process needed to discover what is just a fleeting thought and what might have the meddle to become a fully-formed track. “When we first start our songwriting for a record, it’s always like, ‘Can this be sung by the character that is Finom? A two-headed creature with two voices singing as one. If we can find that singular voice between the two of us, then it becomes a Finom song,” Cunningham explains. “We’ve gotten much closer and come to understand each other in all these different multitudinous layers in our lives. Because of that, the songwriting has become even more intimate and vulnerable. Now, the Finom character gets to be a little more open with deeper feelings.”
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