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WIDOWSPEAK
Announce new EP
‘Honeychurch’
Share Dire Straits’ cover
‘Romeo and Juliet’
Purchase / Stream: HERE
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Praise for WIDOWSPEAK
2SER Feature Album
“Widowspeak fuses lightness and darkness like few others.” – NPR
“Romances, lives, cities, worlds — Widowspeak’s songs contemplate their erosion with a dazed acceptance and music that keeps opening up new spaces.” – New York Times
“Every Widowspeak record is exceptionally intimate.” – AV Club
“Widowspeak take bits and pieces of rock, folk, and country history to make a pop Americana sound that feels antique.” – Pitchfork
“Optimistic-feeling swirl of twangy, textured guitars and dreamy-as-hell vocals” – The FADER
“Rich and atmospheric…speaking to the restlessness of human existence” – KEXP
“Widowspeak take the best parts of folk and shoegaze and twist them together” – Stereogum
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Fresh off the release of their critically-acclaimed fifth album Plum, Widowspeak welcome the new year with Honeychurch, a brand new digital EP out Friday 22 January. Along with the announcement, the duo share a rich, expansive version of Dire Straits’ ‘Romeo and Juliet.’ It’s no secret that Widowspeak’s covers are unmatched. With Molly Hamilton’s serenely sweet vocals and Robert Earl Thomas’ atmospheric guitar they’ve transformed Neil Young’s ‘Harvest Moon,‘ Third Eye Blind’s ‘How’s It Going Be,‘ Chris Isaak’s ‘Wicked Game‘ and now ‘Romeo and Juliet’ into signature Widowspeak ballads. Listen to ‘Romeo and Juliet’ here.
Widowspeak on ‘Romeo and Juliet’ – “It’s one of our mutual favorites, from the very first notes it just takes you to that place. There are also so many different associations wrapped up in the song for me: remembering the first times hearing it, putting it on mix cds, the teen movie soundtracks, even the Indigo Girls cover. And we’re obsessed with the music video. Sometimes you just want to sing something that feels like a friend, ya know? We recorded the cover in an afternoon, and don’t have much of a soundproofed situation, so you can kind of hear the sounds of the neighborhood in the background”.
Like the 17th-century tile on its cover, Honeychurch is a repurposed artifact. Its title, a nod to E.M. Forster’s A Room With A View, was originally a working title for Plum – an album noted and praised by Pitchfork for its “glowing synths and lyrics about labor and death” and Stereogum for the “gentle, beautiful and light as air sounds despite the weight of emotion it carries” – it felt in line with the album’s thematic considerations of class, relationships, and generational ties, but was ultimately set aside. Recorded at their apartment in Brooklyn and mixed and mastered by Jamie Harley (The Jesus and Mary Chain, Mogwai), Widowspeak’s new collection delivers homespun intimations with polished precision. The questions posed on Plum still reverberate, and Honeychurch leaves space for us to hear them better.
Plum’s reflections on work and worth grew more pertinent by the day, singer Molly Hamilton and guitarist Robert Earl Thomas felt there was more to explore.They began with what was already there, toying around with a new take on Plum single ‘Money.’ The resulting track is a pared-down, introspective version, with a foreboding synth tone that asks us to spend more time with its prompt: “will you get back what you put in?” Hamilton and Thomas also recorded a playful, Nancy Sinatra-esque take on R.E.M.’s ‘The One I Love.’ Revisiting a discarded Plum demo about blood ties gave rise to the slow-burning ‘Sanguine,’ while EP closer ‘Honeychurch’ is an ambient epilogue that leaves space for deeper reflection.
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Widowspeak – Honeychurch
is out Friday 22 January
via Captured Tracks / Remote Control
Purchase / Stream: HERE
Widowspeak
Honeychurch
1. Money (Hymn)
2. The One I Love
3. Sanguine
4. Romeo and Juliet
5. Honeychurch
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Website – Facebook – Instagram – Twitter
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AMNPLIFY – DB
My nickname is “The Amnplifier”. Why? Because around here my focus is on being a conduit for providing greater outcomes that people come here for. My day to day “work” is living in the moment, and I love helping others concentrate on finding their connection to themselves through their experiences.
Why start a music environment? The truth is I love music, I love writing, and I love life. I work with musicians every day, and I feel certain that I will be until they put me in the ground. I have been managing people in businesses of some sort for over thirty five years so along the way I have developed some “wisdom” from my regular and constant “observations”.
Amnplify your experience. That is what we want you to do here, and if you want to let me know why you do, or don’t, shoot me a message on Facebook.
Hope you enjoy yourself here and find something that hits you somewhere.