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amos lee

Dreamland

limited indies only blue swirl lp - £17.99 | Buy
With one foot in the real world and the other in a charmed dimension of his own making, Amos Lee creates the rare kind of music that's emotionally raw yet t...
Transmissions

691835876030

  1. Built to Fall
  2. Beautiful Day
  3. Carry You On
  4. Hold on Tight
  5. Madison
  6. Darkest Places
  7. Keen on Movin’
  8. Night Light
  9. Lucky Ones
  10. When You Go
  11. Baby Pictures
  12. Transmission

amos lee

Transmissions

Hoagiemouth / Thirty Tigers
  • very limited indies only translucent sea blue lp (pre-order)

    Expected Release: 9th Aug 2024

    £24.99
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  • lp (pre-order)

    Expected Release: 9th Aug 2024

    £24.99
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  • cd (pre-order)

    Expected Release: 9th Aug 2024

    £11.99
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On his eleventh studio album, singer-songwriter Lee continues to expand his sonic range while sharpening his closely observed lyrics that squarely address death, aging, and love.

The force behind such acclaimed albums as 'Mission Bell' and 'Mountains of Sorrow, Rivers of Song', ever since his gold-selling 2005 debut, Lee has been known for his association with a long list of collaborators and touring partners, from Paul Simon to Zac Brown Band. For the new project, he craved a return to an old-school style of recording, working with his longtime band in a studio in rural Marlboro, New York that was built by drummer Lee Falco and his dad out of reclaimed wood from an old church (“it’s exactly what you’d think a studio in upstate New York should be,” notes Lee). Playing live on the floor for long hours, in close quarters, they were able to capture the album’s twelve songs in less than a week.

“I really wanted us to be all in the room, making music together, listening to each other and responding to each other,” says Lee. “In this age where you can do everything at home and fly it in, there’s something really beautiful about getting in a room and starting at the top, the drummer counting in the song and everybody just playing. I would call it vulnerability.” “There's a lot of existential stuff in these songs,” says Amos Lee. “If you really listen to what's in between the lines, there's a lot of grappling with your place in the world, grappling with loss. There's a lot of grappling with the balance between bailing out the boat and rowing at the same time—the experience of writing music and playing songs while trying, as we all are right now, to make sense of a world that feels like it's changing really quickly.”