other titles...

Water From Your Eyes

Everyone's Crushed

limited red lp - £23.99 | Buy
black lp - £21.99 | Buy
An anarchic, idiosyncratic record we adamantly wish to hawk to everyone we know without having the relevant vocabulary to do it justice.
Water From Your Eyes

Structure

limited indies only white lp - £21.99 | Buy
Water From Your Eyes’ Rachel Brown and Nate Amos are no strangers to contradiction, with Pitchfork making note of their “confidence in splicing diff...
Somebody Else's Song (2024 Repress)
  1. Somebody Else's Song
  2. Break
  3. No Better Now
  4. Look
  5. Adeleine
  6. This Is Slow
  7. Bad In The Sun
  8. Look Again

Water From Your Eyes

Somebody Else's Song (2024 Repress)

EXPLODING IN SOUND RECORDS
  • limited Green with Black & Purple Splatter lp (pre-order)

    Expected Release: 10th May 2024

    £25.99
    Preorder

Back in 2019, Brooklyn's Water From Your Eyes had been evolving and experimenting with their sound.

With "Somebody Else's Song," the band felt that they had found their place, the album an amalgamation of their past releases, honing in previously explored aesthetics but combining and rearranging ideas to capture feelings of self-reflection and personal growth. At their core, the duo of Nate Amos and Rachel Brown make experimental pop music, songs you can dance to, songs that will stick in your head long after you've heard them. The sound of Water From Your Eyes is far more expansive however, and "Somebody Else's Song" is blissfully unclassifiable. The lines of genre have blurred beyond recognition. The landscape flickers between haunting ambiance and noisy immersion, electronic and acoustic elements expressing emotional and mental states that are ever changing. "Somebody Else's Song" was their first true "New York album" since the band's relocation from Chicago, and much of the weight comes from the personal change inherent from living in a new place as life continues to whir around us. The duo took their time, the ideas coming into formation over the course of two years. That patience is apparent as the album unfolds, a balance between vulnerability and enormous shapeshifting rhythms.