dovrebbe essere pubblicato su 13.03.2026
4AD News
Big Thief will release their sixth studio album, Double Infinity, on 5 September 2025.
Double Infinity is the follow-up to 2022’s Grammy-nominated album, Dragon New Warm Mountain I Believe In You, recorded last winter at the Power Station, New York City. For three solid weeks, the trio would ride bicycles on frozen streets between Brooklyn and Manhattan, meeting in Power’s Station’s warm wood-panelled room. Together with a community of musicians (Alena Spanger, Caleb Michel, Hannah Cohen, Jon Nellen, Joshua Crumbly, June McDoom, Laraaji, Mikel Patrick Avery, Mikey Buishas) they would play for nine hours a day, tracking together – simultaneously – improvising arrangements and making collective discoveries. Double Infinity was produced, engineered and mixed by longtime Big Thief collaborator Dom Monks.
“How can beauty that is living be anything but true?” Adrianne asks as she drives nose against the future with childhood mementos on ‘Incomprehensible’. She understands, “everything I see from now on will be something new.” The silver hairs on her shoulders are new as well. Yet fear of aging is cracked by proof. If a life is shaped by living, “Let gravity be my sculptor, let the wind do my hair.” Being born, then staying a while, remains the greatest mystery. Adrianne claims her place and time. “Incomprehensible, let me be.”
g 7. Grandmother ft. Laraaji
g 7. Grandmother ft. Laraaji
g 7. Grandmother ft. Laraaji
g 7. Grandmother ft. Laraaji
g 7. Grandmother ft. Laraaji
[g] 7. Grandmother [ft. Laraaji]
[g] B2. Grandmother [ft. Laraaji]
[g] B2. Grandmother [ft. Laraaji]
Disponibile in Stock e pronto per la spedizione
Disponibile in Stock e pronto per la spedizione
- 1: You Or Your Memory
- 2: Broom People
- 3: This Year
- 4: Dilaudid
- 5: Dance Music
- 6: Dinu Lipatti's Bones
- 7: Up The Wolves
- 8: Lion's Teeth
- 9: Hast Thou Considered The Tetrapod
- 10: Magpie
- 11: Song For Dennis Brown
- 12: Love Love Love
- 13: Pale Green Things
dovrebbe essere pubblicato su 17.10.2025
- A1: My Secret Reason
- A2: Trouble
- A3: Geek The Girl; Drums – Kenny Aronoff
- A4: Just Geek; Drums – Malcolm Burn; Written-By – Malcolm Burn
- A5: Cry Wolf; Written-By – Jay Joyce, Malcolm Burn
- A6: A Psychopath
- B1: Sexy Little Girl Princess; Drums, Dulcimer, Piano – Malcolm Burn; Written-By – Malcolm Burn
- B2: Phantom Love
- B3: Cancer Of Everything; Drums – Kenny Aronoff; Guitar – Malcolm Burn
- B4: A Guy Like You
- B5: Of Love And Colors
- B6: Stars; Drums – Kenny Aronoff
- B7: The Mirror Is Gone
- C1: Happiness
- C2: Energy
- C3: Puppet
- D1: Sycophant; Written-By – Jaye Joyce, Lisa Germano
- D2: (Late Night) Dresse
Ordina ora e ordineremo l'articolo per te presso il nostro fornitore.
Last In: 8 months ago
Big Thief will release their sixth studio album, Double Infinity, on 5 September 2025.
Double Infinity is the follow-up to 2022’s Grammy-nominated album, Dragon New Warm Mountain I Believe In You, recorded last winter at the Power Station, New York City. For three solid weeks, the trio would ride bicycles on frozen streets between Brooklyn and Manhattan, meeting in Power’s Station’s warm wood-panelled room. Together with a community of musicians (Alena Spanger, Caleb Michel, Hannah Cohen, Jon Nellen, Joshua Crumbly, June McDoom, Laraaji, Mikel Patrick Avery, Mikey Buishas) they would play for nine hours a day, tracking together – simultaneously – improvising arrangements and making collective discoveries. Double Infinity was produced, engineered and mixed by longtime Big Thief collaborator Dom Monks.
“How can beauty that is living be anything but true?” Adrianne asks as she drives nose against the future with childhood mementos on ‘Incomprehensible’. She understands, “everything I see from now on will be something new.” The silver hairs on her shoulders are new as well. Yet fear of aging is cracked by proof. If a life is shaped by living, “Let gravity be my sculptor, let the wind do my hair.” Being born, then staying a while, remains the greatest mystery. Adrianne claims her place and time. “Incomprehensible, let me be.”
g 7. Grandmother ft. Laraaji
g 7. Grandmother ft. Laraaji
[g] 7. Grandmother [ft. Laraaji]
[g] 7. Grandmother [ft. Laraaji]
[g] 7. Grandmother [ft. Laraaji]
dovrebbe essere pubblicato su 05.09.2025
dovrebbe essere pubblicato su 04.09.2025
- A1: Trompe Le Monde
- A2: Planet Of Sound
- A3: Alec Eiffel
- A4: The Sad Punk
- A5: Head On; Written-By – Jim Reid, William Reid
- A6: U-Mass
- A7: Palace Of The Brine
- A8: Letter To Memphis
- B1: Bird Dream Of The Olympus Mons
- B2: Space (I Believe In)
- B3: Subbacultcha
- B4: Distance Equals Rate Times Time
- B5: Lovely Day
- B6: Motorway To Roswell
- B7: The Navajo Know
dovrebbe essere pubblicato su 23.06.2025
dovrebbe essere pubblicato su 20.06.2025
dovrebbe essere pubblicato su 20.06.2025
- A1: Your Ghost; Vocals
- A2: Beestung
- A3: Teeth
- A4: Sundrops
- A5: Sparky
- A6: Houdini Blues; Written-By – Kristin Hersh, W J. Hersh*
- B7: A Loon
- B8: Velvet Days
- B9: Close Your Eyes
- B10: Me And My Charms
- B11: Tuesday Night
- C12: The Letter; Engineer – Steve Rizzo; Producer – Kristin Hersh, Steve Rizzo; Remix – Phill Brown
- C13: Lurch
- C14: Cuckoo; Arranged By – Kristin Hersh; Written-By – Traditional
- C15: Hips And Makers
- C16: Hysterical Bending; Engineer – Billy O'connell, Steve Rizzo; Mixed By – Steve Rizzo; Producer – Billy Mcconnell, Kristin Hersh
- C17: The Key
- C18: Uncle June And Aunt Kiyoti; Written-By – K Hersh*, W.j. Hersh*
- C19: When The Levee Breaks; Written-By – Page*, Bonham*, Jones*, Minnie*, Plant*
- D20: A Loon
- D21: Sundrops
- D22: Me And My Charms
- D23: Velvet Days
- D24: The Key
dovrebbe essere pubblicato su 20.06.2025
- A1: Making Money
- A2: The Sweetest Thing (Richard Hawley Remix)
- A3: Break It To You Gently (The Wild Honey Pie Buzzsession)
- A4: Tougher Than The Rest, Written-By – Bruce Springsteen
- A5: The Nights Are Cold, Written-By – Richard Willis Hawley*
- A6: I'm Not In Love (The Dermot O'leary Saturday Sessions Show), Written-By – Eric Stewart, Graham Gouldman
- B1: French Navy (Jim Noir Remix)
- B2: The World Is Full Of Strangers
- B3: Do It Again (The Wild Honey Pie Buzzsession)
- B4: Swallows
- B5: You're The Only Star In My Blue Heaven, Written-By – Gene Autry
- B6: The Blizzard
dovrebbe essere pubblicato su 20.06.2025
Ordina ora e ordineremo l'articolo per te presso il nostro fornitore.
Last In: 15 months ago
dovrebbe essere pubblicato su 22.11.2024
Since its original release in 1980 to generally indifferent reviews, Bauhaus" debut album has grown in stature and is now appreciated as an innovative foundation stone of "Gothic" music. Peaking at number one and remaining on the UK "Indie" chart for over two years, this dynamic collection defies categorisation, offering an incendiary tinderbox of driving jagged rhythms, screeching guitars, brooding atmospherics, provocative lyrics and wildly animated vocals.
dovrebbe essere pubblicato su 22.11.2024
The fresh-faced folk pop band Stornoway seem promising: They play with guileless vigor, have a light-stepping chemistry as a unit, harmonize well. Their lead singer Brian Briggs has a lovely, pure high tenor, the kind of voice that effortlessly conveys simple longing. And yet, on their second album, Tales from Terra Firma, they continue to be almost crushingly dull, making well-appointed and cheerfully empty music that successfully communicates next to nothing.
Their Achilles Heel is a simple and unfortunate one, the same on Tales as it was on 2010's Beachcombers Windowsill. Stornoway are clearly in love with Celtic and British folk, and yet they can't write a memorable melody to save their lives. Try to sing along to the verse melody of "Zorbing", their most well-known tune, and pay attention to what your face muscles are doing; most likely furrowing with the effort of recall. Each of Tales' painstakingly arranged nine songs sinks underneath the weight of this insurmountable problem, which is a shame.
If you're making folk-pop, an inability to write a catchy melody is a difficult deficiency to overcome. Stornoway try valiantly with their complex arrangements, which quickly grow exhausting. “You Take Me as I Am” is cluttered with horn charts and pointlessly banging piano. “(A Belated) Invite to Eternity” builds to a full Explosions in the Sky crescendo, with glimmering tremolo guitar and a “Tonight, Tonight”-style sweeping string section, but having built zero momentum and generated zero heat until that point, their planned fireworks display fizzles.
“Farewell Appalachia” follows the same pattern, with celesta, finger-picked acoustic and electric guitar all tracing an emptily pretty circle with nothing in the center. The melody of "The Great Procrastinator" is almost cleanly written enough to be memorable-- and then the ersatz Dixieland jazz interlude crashes in. Stornoway are deft players, and the transitions are tightly managed, but this is praise on the same order as praising the brushwork in a hotel-room painting.
Briggs’ lyrics are filled with uncomplicated images of the good old British countryside, but his lyrics trample over all these dew-covered fields with wordy, awkward phrasing: "And in the gathering dew, I was lucid as a floodlight,” goes a line from “(A Belated) Invitation to Eternity”. “There's a hunger in the air/ A lemon swollen in the trees" he bleats on “Knock Me on the Head”. On “The Great Procrastinator”, he sings that he is “a scientist with far too many metaphors and far too little data to conclude in time.” They don’t read particularly well, and they don’t sound much more natural when sung.
Tales From Terra Firma is a peculiar record-- carefree music that feels leaden; tuneful-sounding songs that offer no tunes to hold onto. They seem an odd fit for 4AD, a label mostly home to singular voices. They may be a mercenary signing, an attempt to ride the coattails of Mumford and Sons' success. But Mumford and Sons, as head-smack simple and pandering as they are, have a pretty crucial ingredient in their arsenal: they write anthems. In that regard, they have Stornoway pretty thoroughly beat.
Ordina ora e ordineremo l'articolo per te presso il nostro fornitore.
Last In: 2 years ago
dovrebbe essere pubblicato su 26.01.2024
- A1: Zorbing
- A2: I Saw You Blink
- A3: Fuel Up
- A4: The Coldharbour Road
- A5: Boats And Trains
- A6: We Are The Battery Human
- B1: Here Comes The Blackout
- B2: Watching Birds
- B3: On The Rocks
- B4: The End Of The Movie
- B5: Long Distance Lullaby
- A1: You Take Me As I Am
- A2: Farewell Appalachia
- A3: The Bigger Picture
- A4: (A Belated) Invite To Eternity
- B1: Hook, Line, Sinker
- B2: Knock Me On The Head
- B3: The Great Procrastinator
- B4: The Ones We Hurt The Most
- B5: November Song
dovrebbe essere pubblicato su 19.01.2024
dovrebbe essere pubblicato su 13.12.2023
Big Thief's music, rooted in the songs of Adrianne Lenker, paints in vivid tones "the process of harnessing pain, loss, and love, while simultaneously letting go, looking into your own eyes through someone else's, and being okay with the inevitability of death," says Adrianne.
Masterpiece, Big Thief's debut album, is -lled with characters and visceral narratives, songs that pivot in the space of a few words. Adrianne's voice and guitar playing speak of rich emotional territory with grace and insight. In her words, the record tracks "the masterpiece of existence, which is always folding into itself, people attempting to connect, to both shake themselves awake and to shake o the numbness of certain points in their life. The interpretations might be impressionistic or surrealistic, but they're grounded in simple things.'
Adrianne met her longtime musical partner, guitarist and singer, Buck Meek, in Brooklyn a few years ago, and they quickly formed a creative bond tempered by the experience of traveling and performing for months on end in old dive bars, yards, barns, and basements together. They recorded a pair of duo albums (A-Sides and B-Sides), and Adrianne showcased her songs on a solo album, Hours Were The Birds.
Now, as a full rock and roll band, with Buck on guitar, Max Oleartchik on bass, and James Krivchenia on drums, they bring a steady wildness, giving the songs an even deeper layer of nostalgia. "These guys feel like a pack of wolves at my back," says Adrianne, "they make the songs howl and bark with a fierce tenderness that gives me courage."
After spending last July in an old house that they turned into a studio on Lake Champlain with producer Andrew Sarlo, the resulting collection soars on what Big Thief fan Sharon Van Etten calls "...a real journey, with intelligent stories and twist-and-turn melodies.
dovrebbe essere pubblicato su 08.12.2023




















