Friends,
Second post on here to kindly inform you that we have a new single release coming your way: The third and final single, 'I Thank Thee Whom I Found in the Hills' (February 21), from @Homesickness upcoming album, Anamnesis (March 21).
Fifty-three years after Sibylle Baier released her song, “I Lost Something in the Hills,” Malthe Junge, songwriter in Homesickness, was moved to pen a response: “While Baier’s song seems to lament a metaphysical object - something intangible yet significant - that she lost,” Junge explains, “my interpretation transforms this object into a presence; to me, it represents a being or entity embodying healing and care.”
Malthe is an amazing songwriter (with an incredibly talented band...). The new album brims with emotion and creativity. Subtle traces of Laughing Stock-esque post-rock, tape-based ambient experimentation, slowcore.... Besides, of course, plenty of threads to seriously hard-to-find, mystical, almost pagan-like '60s/'70s folk. Not the kind of thing that's released in Denmark every week. Highly (!) recommended.
Remember to join the release event March 21 at Christianhavns Beboerhus. Link to presave single in bio.
Best (and enjoy your weekend),
Nikolaj
#chamberfolk
Second post on here to kindly inform you that we have a new single release coming your way: The third and final single, 'I Thank Thee Whom I Found in the Hills' (February 21), from @Homesickness upcoming album, Anamnesis (March 21).
Fifty-three years after Sibylle Baier released her song, “I Lost Something in the Hills,” Malthe Junge, songwriter in Homesickness, was moved to pen a response: “While Baier’s song seems to lament a metaphysical object - something intangible yet significant - that she lost,” Junge explains, “my interpretation transforms this object into a presence; to me, it represents a being or entity embodying healing and care.”
Malthe is an amazing songwriter (with an incredibly talented band...). The new album brims with emotion and creativity. Subtle traces of Laughing Stock-esque post-rock, tape-based ambient experimentation, slowcore.... Besides, of course, plenty of threads to seriously hard-to-find, mystical, almost pagan-like '60s/'70s folk. Not the kind of thing that's released in Denmark every week. Highly (!) recommended.
Remember to join the release event March 21 at Christianhavns Beboerhus. Link to presave single in bio.
Best (and enjoy your weekend),
Nikolaj
#chamberfolk