Showing posts with label El Ten Eleven. Show all posts
Showing posts with label El Ten Eleven. Show all posts

Friday, 6 March 2026

Sarah Sharp - Aldous Harding - Salarymen - El Ten Eleven - Kye Alfred Hillig

Photo -  Zack Brigham

Sarah Sharp - Don’t Think Twice, It’s Alright.

Austin-based singer/songwriter Sarah Sharp just announced the upcoming release of her debut album Deja Vü out May 15 via Spaceflight Records. A staple of the Austin music scene, the former leader of the critically-acclaimed Jitterbug Vipers and highly respected commercial songwriter's luminous debut blends intimate, nocturnal arrangements with her incredible vocal prowess. 

Alongside the announcement, Sharp has shared her interpretation of Bob Dylan’s “Don’t Think Twice, It’s Alright”. She started performing the tune during her nine-year prestigious residency at the Elephant Room in Austin when a former boyfriend developed cancer. Passing away soon after, Sharp's reading reflects on the disappointment of past relationships, embodying life experience and loss.

When asked about the timing of her debut, Sharp says, “My kids are now old enough”, underscoring her commitment as a single mother. “I want to play for way more people. Traveling with your music to other parts of the world is like running up and saying hello to parts of yourself that you can’t always access. It’s so powerful to integrate them. I’m always striving to become whole while keeping my heart open - living in the flow of what my friends call ‘Sarahdipity’.”

After nine years of her prestigious residency at the Elephant Room, Sarah Sharp recorded her debut album in the studio of local guitar legend Eric Johnson, who offered the space to her after being mesmerized by one of her performances. The result crosses over a multitude of genres, from jazz, to folk, to americana, providing a wide cinematic canvas on which she traverses a haunting emotional journey. Deja Vü marks the singer coming into her own in the national spotlight, with a distinguished, smokey vocal in the lineage of Norah Jones.


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Aldous Harding - One Stop.

It's time to buckle up for Aldous Harding's fifth studio album, Train On The Island (on 4AD). 

Her first album since her 2022 release Warm Chris, Flying Nun Records in New Zealand are making the album available digitally and on CD, red vinyl gatefold, exclusive ‘Flying Nun Black’ vinyl gatefold, and exclusive ‘Holiday Records Copper’ vinyl gatefold [limited to 50 copies] all out on 8th May 2026! 

This week marked the release of the first single and video One Stop. Premiered by Huw Stephens on his BBC 6Music radio show, One Stop is accompanied by a Harding-esque video directed by Michelle Henning (Props/location/assistance by Hana Shimada).


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Salarymen - Borrowed Time.

Sydney's Salarymen are rolling straight off a mostly sold-out UK tour with DMAs and Old Mervs and they're not hitting pause. New music drops today March 6th, plus a run of Australian headline shows this March. The indie outfit unleash Take It Or Leave It (Extended), featuring new single 'Borrowed Time'—an atmospheric psych-pop/indie rock fusion that takes aim at the music industry's unspoken expiration date for female artists.

'Borrowed Time' combines Djo's hazy, reverb-drenched guitars and warbly synths, with Alice Phoebe Lou's ethereal, captivating vocals. It's retro-leaning but sophisticated in all the right ways, with tight harmonies, clever chord changes and richly-layered soundscapes
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But beneath the shimmering surface lies a hard-hitting message: women in music are working against a clock nobody sets but everyone enforces. Once women hit their late 20s, suddenly there's this quiet pressure, this sense that your window is closing before you've even hit your peak. “In a world increasingly obsessed with youth, women in music are quietly taught that relevance has a shelf life, long before their artistry has room to mature.” says Renee de la Motte.

The extended version also features ‘Echoes’, a fan-fan favourite dream pop track inspired by the likes of Beach House and Alvvays. Written in memory of two friends who tragically passed away, the song is a stunningly-raw and beautiful depiction of grief and the fragility of life.


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El Ten Eleven - Formerly Fresh.

The legendary post-rock duo El Ten Eleven have just released the driving and electric new track "Formerly Fresh" from their upcoming album, Nowhere Faster, on April 10th via Joyful Noise Recordings. "The title is us poking fun at how old we are getting," El Ten bassist Kristian Dunn says. "Everything you hear other than drums is coming from a fretless acoustic bass guitar (yes, with loads of effects at times!). On our new record, side one was recorded with my usual electric basses, but side two is all on the acoustic."

Not many bands greet aging head-on, and fewer still announce it with a cowbell. El Ten Eleven does both without flinching. “Formerly Fresh” is a self-effacing glance in the mirror—a song that understands time has passed and refuses to apologize. Moving between peppy, string-driven swells and quieter passages built on little more than bass and shaker, it finds El Ten Eleven at their oldest—and, undoubtedly, at the peak of their powers.

We like to believe our lives can be shaped into stories—clean arcs, legible meaning—but life refuses the outline. Instead, it moves bluntly and without apology, indifferent to our sense of order. Events pile up without resolution, momentum divorced from direction, motion confused for progress. Sometimes the only refuge left is the nowhere of our own minds.


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Kye Alfred Hillig - The All-Night Costume Company (Album).

Tacoma, Washington songwriter Kye Alfred Hillig this week releases The All-Night Costume Company, his ninth solo album. It’s a record born from necessity rather than momentum, written during a period when Hillig had nearly walked away from music altogether, and found himself worse for it. What emerged instead is his most vital and clear-eyed work to date, an album shaped by collapse, community, and the unglamorous work of staying alive. For more than two decades, Hillig has been a steady presence in the Puget Sound underground, splitting his life between songwriting, social services, and a string of bands and solo releases that value truth over spectacle. 

Since stepping fully into his solo work in 2012, he’s built a catalog known for sharp melodies, indelible hooks, and lyrics that refuse to soften the blow. His writing carries echoes of Bob Dylan’s moral unease and narrative patience, delivered with a plainspoken, blue-collar directness that recalls Springsteen at his most human rather than heroic. There’s also a modern indie pulse running through the record, a sense of emotional lift and tension familiar to fans of The Jayhawks and Wilco’s early work, even as The All-Night Costume Company stands firmly on its own.

The album exists because Hillig’s band refused to let him disappear. After releasing the double album In All Colors Singing Back in 2022, Hillig became largely inactive, convinced that music had taken more than it had given. Walking away didn’t bring relief. It made things worse. By the fall of 2024, his life had begun to unravel in quiet but dangerous ways. A rare full-band show that November at Tacoma’s Edison Square changed everything. In front of a packed room, something snapped back into place. Afterward, his band demanded a record. Hillig owed them one, and more than that, he needed it. The band at the center of The All-Night Costume Company — guitarist David Bilbrey, keyboardist Bill Nordwall, bassist Yoswa, drummer and multi-instrumentalist Jasen Samford, and backing vocalist Annie J — isn’t presented as a supporting cast, but as a collective force. Their presence shapes the record’s emotional center, giving Hillig the space and pressure needed to finish what he’d nearly abandoned.


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Tuesday, 5 June 2018

Ana Silvera - El Ten Eleven

Ana Silvera - Circle Of Chalk.

Background - Since the 2012 release of her debut album, 'The Aviary', singer-songwriter Ana Silvera's work has garnered broad acclaim from audiences and critics alike. Her uniquely ethereal brand of alt-folk has seen her perform at SXSW, Iceland Airwaves Festival, Liverpool Royal Philharmonic and more, whilst recent collaborations include composing for Royal Ballet, duetting with Imogen Heap and singing original songs with early music consort Concerto Caledonia.Now six-years after her last full-length record, Silvera is about to release her sophomore album, ‘Oracles’.

“It was Marcus Davey, artistic director of the Roundhouse, who was really the Oracles fairy-godfather. I’d sung in choirs till the age of 15, so that was always my musical foundation. Then Marcus mentioned this great, experimental in-house choir [REC] who were keen to collaborate. It was a very open-ended commission, basically ‘do what you want, use the choir somehow’. I don’t think either Marcus or I realised how much I needed to write this piece”.

Poignant, dreamlike and beautiful, and written following the sudden loss of her mother and brother, ‘Oracles’ was Silvera’s way to transmute her grief into a cathartic work of art. “I wrote ‘Oracles’ in a state of absolute urgency and emergency – it felt like I had been buried in the ground myself, and writing this music was a small pocket of air, my chance to breathe again”.

In 2011, the song-cycle was debuted with REC, and the following year was performed as part of a sold-out concert on the Roundhouse Main Stage, earning Silvera a nomination for a British Composer Award. She then returned to the Roundhouse Theatre to make a live recording of the piece, which forms her second full-length album. The recording features Silvera as a soloist, a choir led by Josephine Stephenson and a stellar line-up of guest musicians including pianist Bill Laurance (Snarky Puppy), double bassist Jasper Høiby (Phronesis) and drummer Jacob Smedegaard (Fiction, Du Blonde) as well as Simran Singh (violin), Anne Chauveau-Dhayan (cello) and Naomi Morris (percussion).

The result is a haunting yet life-affirming collection of songs whose lyrics explore loss, love, salvation and the journey towards acceptance, themes that are underscored by beguiling, weaving choral lines, mellifluous Debussian piano melodies, subtly off-kilter percussion and rapturous strings, all unified by Silvera’s dynamic vocal style which evokes the delicate yet theatrical prowess of Kate Bush, combined with what the Arts Desk described as a “Björk-like spontaneity’.


Conceptually, the piece follows the arc of a ‘quest’ – a folk tale that begins with a search for a tangible or symbolic goal and ends with a triumphant return home. “On reflection, I see my quest was to fathom this experience and - though it no longer existed in the familial sense of the word - to find my own way back home”. ‘Skeleton Song’, an Inuit-myth inspired tune about a woman who is sung back to life, is a fragile yet powerful paean to the female figures surrounding Silvera who “painstakingly pieced me together again”. ‘Catherine Wheels’, the epiphanic closing song, whose swelling strings push the song-cycle to an emotional climax, celebrates “the kind of earth-bound, steadfast love” that allowed Silvera to finally reckon with her past and come to terms with the present.

Says Silvera, “I can honestly say, I found it so moving that post-performance, audience members would come and speak to me about their own experiences of bereavement. Making that human connection and finding we are not alone is perhaps the greatest healer of all”. WEBSITE.


Opening with rhythmic drums and vocal chants 'Circle Of Chalk' soon begins to have an expansive feel to it. Ana Silvera's vocals are captivating, powerful and dramatic, and as the song continues to develop additional elements to the musical arrangement, these further complement the hypnotic and beguiling singing. Despite the track being over six minutes in duration, I was left eager to hear it again, along with everything else that will follow.

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El Ten Eleven - Phenomenal Problems.

Background - Seminal post-rock duo El Ten Eleven, have announced the release of their new album Banker’s Hill (out 8/10 via Topshelf Records). They have also released the lead single “Phenomenal Problems” and its corresponding live video. The video is an up close and personal look at the formative duo’s meticulously-honed skills at work… crazy how much sonic force two people can conjure!

Armed with merely a double-neck bass/guitar, drums and a dizzying array of pedals, El Ten Eleven create complex, resounding music from scratch, onstage, with no help from laptops or additional musicians. Made up of Kristian Dunn (bass, guitar) and Tim Fogarty (Drums), they utilize multiple looping pedals to create songs that sound as though they are being played by at least six people… most first-timers to an El Ten Eleven show are stunned that the band is a duo. It’s a refreshing sight in this age of letting the computers do all the work!

Banker's Hill is a nine-song exploration into the challenge of living in the moment. The bands' music has been described as “meditation in motion,” which seems apt - the album explores the paradox of beauty in anxiety, the importance and effect of family and the fleeting possibility of satisfaction. Since the band’s inception in 2002, they have always been just two people who produce their own records. For Banker’s Hill, the band brought producer Sonny Diperri (Animal Collective, Dirty Projectors) into the fold, which is the first time the duo has ever worked with an outside producer, and moved up to the beautiful Panoramic House studios in Stinson Beach on the beautiful Northern California coast to create their seventh album (also, their first for Topshelf Records). TWITTER.

Rock duo's always seem to pack a punch and El Ten Eleven are no exception. 'Phenomenal Problems' is however far more than just sonic energy, there's melody, variations in sound that with two people live, seems remarkable, and above all else, this is a fabulous and hook laden blast of post rock.


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The Orielles - Emily Nenni - Birds Flying Backwards - Hunter Morris / Mountain of Youth

The Orielles - Only You Left (Album). The Orielles new album Only You Left is officially released today March 11 via Heavenly Recordings. “...