
Ceremony: Vinyl LP
MA0386LPPre-Order Item. Release Date Subject to Change.
Label: Milk!/Marathon Artists
Release Date: 28th April
A debut outta nowhere will always offer a rush of excitement but growing with an artist is something a little more special, feels more like a commitment to growth between listener and artist. Tiny Ruins are band offering the rich rewards of getting better after 10 plus years of making records. Hollie Fullbrook doesn't rush a release and the result end up being albums like 'Ceremony', deeply personal albums about loss and self with songs that recall the most adored sounds of 70s rock, folk and country rock.
For those who dig: Neil Young's Crazy Horse, Big Thief, Aldous Harding, Nadia Reid, Hand Habits, Joan Shelley...
A rare blend of eloquent lyrical craft and explorative musicianship, the songs of Tiny Ruins are etched into the memories of crowds and critics worldwide.
Traversing influences that cross genre and era, the artistry of Hollie Fullbrook and her band spans delicate folk, lustrous dream pop and ebullient psychedelia. Building on the sparse arrangements and a novelist's eye for detailcultivated over the past several years, the group's greatly anticipated fourth album is out on Marathon Artists and Courtney Barnett's label Milk! Records.
Where the third album Olympic Girls was suffused with loss and existential emptiness, with fourth album Ceremony, Hollie Fullbrook's evolution as Tiny Ruins has reached an apex of power, as she's become a deft bandleader of incredible musicians. Ceremony has many moods, ranging from intense minimalist 'Diving & Soaring' that evokes a classic folk vibe through to the heavier Neil-Young & Crazy Horse inspired 'Dorothy Bay', boppy danceable 'In Light of Everything', and the hooky, uplifting 'Dogs Dreaming'. Noodly 70s electric guitars, eclectic percussion and prominent bass make it their most listenable and accessible album to date. The songs are all of a theme - exploring the coastal shores of the Manukau Harbour and working through a psychological 'shellscape', while tending toward a joyful / hopeful take on the passing of time.
Ceremony is Hollie's highest achievement, an album about confronting confusion, loss, dislocation and ultimately, realising the beauty of life's unpredictable paths.