
New Music from the Inbox: Eunike Tanzil, Amy Lennox, Geese, and more!

Artist: Eunike Tanzil
Song: Pink Sakura
Album: The First of Everything
Classical composer and pianist Eunike Tanzil’s debut album is made up of musical snapshots of a series of significant firsts in her life. She explains: “There’s a story behind each track, and all the tracks are based on personal experiences, specifically first experiences – the key moments in my life that shaped me into who I am today. Once I found the flow and knew what the album was going to be about, it all came very naturally.” The First of Everything is out now!
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Artist: Amy Lennox
Song: Married
Album: John Casssavetes’ Opening Night
John Cassavetes’ Opening Night is the first stage musical with music, lyrics, and orchestrations by Rufus Wainwright. This track features the vocals of Olivier Award-nominated actress Amy Lennox.
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Artist: Lydia Luce
Song: Quiet
Album: Mammoth
This is the latest single from Lydia Luce’s upcoming album Mammoth, which will be out October 30. Lydia explains: “’Quiet‘ is a song for my partner and I. Quiet‘ is about the ability to sit with someone and not have to say anything. To be able to soak up their presence and find contentment, joy and peace in the silence. We are about to have our first kiddo and it’s something we’ve been trying for, for the last year and a half. Everything is about to change in our house and we are truly cherishing these final months at home, just the two of us and our dog.”
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Artist: Geese
Song: Au Pays du Cocaine
Album: Getting Killed
Getting Killed, the third album from Geese, is out now!
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Artist: fka boursin
Song: Listless Intertext
EP: Listless Intertext
This is the title track of fka boursin’s new EP, out now. fka boursin explains: “Listless Intertext is a track centred around the “failed” employment of cheap vocoder software that attempted to process explicit words and phrases across 11 minutes. Instead, the vocoder output made any words indecipherable and I was left with thematic vagueness. The final text of the track is simply a submission to its own limitations with some french thrown in.”
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