Glitter Fox
Change and perspective expand quickly in tight quarters—and no one knows that as well as
married couple Solange Igoa and Andrea Walker. It’s true of each of their time as queer kids in
need of an escape from conservative towns; of their years living together in a van, traveling the
country to play music and busk; of settling down in a studio apartment just prior to the
pandemic. And now, partnered with a rhythm section and produced by Chris Funk of the
Decemberists, they’re harnessing the lessons from this closeness and cracking them wide open
into a whole new world with their band Glitterfox.
The duo first met at a coffee house open mic in Long Beach, California, where Walker had
recently relocated after growing up in North Carolina and Virginia. She quickly fell in love with
Igoa’s voice, knowing that if their vocals and her guitar came together that would only flourish—
and it did, the two now married and having spent more than a decade as a pair. Musically,
channeling Walker’s Southern warmth through Southern California indie shine, Glitterfox carves
out lithe, nostalgia-fueled anthems powered by the intimacy of their relationship. “A lot of our
songs are about serious challenges in our lives,” Walker says. “All the struggles in my life get
poured into the music, but always with this silver lining of hope, this drive not to quit before the
miracle happens. Making a living as an independent musician is hard, but we’ve always had
each other and always made it work.”
Igoa and Walker quickly found new roots when they moved out of their van and settled down in
Portland, Oregon, in 2018, quickly cementing a reputation for their boundless energy and
positivity. Soon they were joined by Eric Stalker, a singer-songwriter who got along with the
couple so well that he volunteered to learn bass as a way to join their band. Drummer Blaine
Heinonen followed, the quartet now capable of producing grander leaps of musical gravity to
crash through the couple’s golden-hued compositions.
The group’s soaring intimacy quickly won over Pacific Northwest fans and heroes in addition to
Funk, with Kill Rock Stars label head Slim Moon who jumped at the opportunity to sign them.
Despite that rapid growth, the beating heart of Glitterfox will always be Walker and Igoa’s love.
“Having a band that’s built around a healthy marriage is cool because it has longevity. We’re a
very stable unit and we’re a family,” Walker says. “We’ve learned how to trust each other’s
instincts. When Solange and I play together, it’s so second nature—their voice and my guitar
are so intimately bound”
“Drive” — 150 words
Growing up gay in the South in the ‘90s, Glitterfox’s Andrea Walker dreamed of escape. “I
couldn’t tell anyone. I was in the closet,” she recalls. “I was silently struggling and isolated, but
always dreaming of getting out of there, knowing that there was something better for me,
somewhere better.” That desperate hope powers the rushing “Drive”, the latest single from the
band Walker shares with her spouse, vocalist Solange Igoa. That questing urge must have
resonated for Walker, as she quickly left North Carolina behind in favor of Arizona and California
(“I’d always romanticized the idea of ‘the West’,” she recalls), not to mention having lived with
Igoa in a van for two years, traveling the country and developing their sound prior through
busking and performing at a wide swath of venues. Now settled in Portland, Oregon, the group
has crafted a slice of burnished indie as indebted to Fleetwood Mac as it is to Kate Bush. But as
is evident in the thundering forward motion and yearning of “Drive”, the world hasn’t stopped
despite having found love and acceptance. “Physically leaving doesn’t heal everything—you
take the damage with you,” Walker says. “I’m thankful I have a cool therapist now who is helping
me process and make peace with my queer identity, because there’s no time like the present to
heal, and any age is a good age to start loving yourself a little more.”
Glitter Fox
Change and perspective expand quickly in tight quarters—and no one knows that as well as
married couple Solange Igoa and Andrea Walker. It’s true of each of their time as queer kids in
need of an escape from conservative towns; of their years living together in a van, traveling the
country to play music and busk; of settling down in a studio apartment just prior to the
pandemic. And now, partnered with a rhythm section and produced by Chris Funk of the
Decemberists, they’re harnessing the lessons from this closeness and cracking them wide open
into a whole new world with their band Glitterfox.
The duo first met at a coffee house open mic in Long Beach, California, where Walker had
recently relocated after growing up in North Carolina and Virginia. She quickly fell in love with
Igoa’s voice, knowing that if their vocals and her guitar came together that would only flourish—
and it did, the two now married and having spent more than a decade as a pair. Musically,
channeling Walker’s Southern warmth through Southern California indie shine, Glitterfox carves
out lithe, nostalgia-fueled anthems powered by the intimacy of their relationship. “A lot of our
songs are about serious challenges in our lives,” Walker says. “All the struggles in my life get
poured into the music, but always with this silver lining of hope, this drive not to quit before the
miracle happens. Making a living as an independent musician is hard, but we’ve always had
each other and always made it work.”
Igoa and Walker quickly found new roots when they moved out of their van and settled down in
Portland, Oregon, in 2018, quickly cementing a reputation for their boundless energy and
positivity. Soon they were joined by Eric Stalker, a singer-songwriter who got along with the
couple so well that he volunteered to learn bass as a way to join their band. Drummer Blaine
Heinonen followed, the quartet now capable of producing grander leaps of musical gravity to
crash through the couple’s golden-hued compositions.
The group’s soaring intimacy quickly won over Pacific Northwest fans and heroes in addition to
Funk, with Kill Rock Stars label head Slim Moon who jumped at the opportunity to sign them.
Despite that rapid growth, the beating heart of Glitterfox will always be Walker and Igoa’s love.
“Having a band that’s built around a healthy marriage is cool because it has longevity. We’re a
very stable unit and we’re a family,” Walker says. “We’ve learned how to trust each other’s
instincts. When Solange and I play together, it’s so second nature—their voice and my guitar
are so intimately bound”
“Drive” — 150 words
Growing up gay in the South in the ‘90s, Glitterfox’s Andrea Walker dreamed of escape. “I
couldn’t tell anyone. I was in the closet,” she recalls. “I was silently struggling and isolated, but
always dreaming of getting out of there, knowing that there was something better for me,
somewhere better.” That desperate hope powers the rushing “Drive”, the latest single from the
band Walker shares with her spouse, vocalist Solange Igoa. That questing urge must have
resonated for Walker, as she quickly left North Carolina behind in favor of Arizona and California
(“I’d always romanticized the idea of ‘the West’,” she recalls), not to mention having lived with
Igoa in a van for two years, traveling the country and developing their sound prior through
busking and performing at a wide swath of venues. Now settled in Portland, Oregon, the group
has crafted a slice of burnished indie as indebted to Fleetwood Mac as it is to Kate Bush. But as
is evident in the thundering forward motion and yearning of “Drive”, the world hasn’t stopped
despite having found love and acceptance. “Physically leaving doesn’t heal everything—you
take the damage with you,” Walker says. “I’m thankful I have a cool therapist now who is helping
me process and make peace with my queer identity, because there’s no time like the present to
heal, and any age is a good age to start loving yourself a little more.”