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Adrianne Elizabeth Lenker (born July 9, 1991) is an American musician. She is the lead vocalist, guitarist and principal songwriter of the band Big Thief , as well as an established solo artist. She has released several solo albums, including Abysskiss (2018), Songs and Instrumentals (both 2020), and Bright Future (2024), the latter of which ...
Anything" was released as a single the same day. [7] "Dragon Eyes" was released as a single on October 1, 2020. [24] Songs and Instrumentals were released by 4AD on October 23, 2020. [8] A video of Lenker playing "Zombie Girl" in the cabin was released the same day. [25] The albums feature artwork of watercolor paintings by Lenker's grandmother ...
Adrianne Lenker met Buck Meek at a show in Boston, and after meeting him again in Brooklyn as undergraduates, the pair began performing as a duo. [3] [4] They toured as a duo in 2013, and released two EPs, a-sides and b-sides, in 2014. In 2015, after performing for two years and developing a small grassroots following, they began looking for ...
The Music Hall of Williamsburg was buzzing at 9 p.m. Monday night as 600-some people filed into the venue to watch Adrianne Lenker debut songs from her new solo album “Bright Future,” out Friday.
Big Thief vocalist/guitarist Adrianne Lenker has detailed her fifth solo album, 'Bright Future,' which will be released March 22 through 4AD.
[3] Peter Watts of Uncut hailed it as a "landmark" album, writing that "Adrianne Lenker's genius has fully blossomed on this monumental double LP, which seamlessly blends her ambiguous melodies and absorbing narratives with a yearning for classic Americana and the band's indie-rock leanings."
Shakira swaps revenge for something more nuanced, while Waxahatchee and Adrianne Lenker double down on their previous albums’ brilliance, and Elbow return to the spare melodies and dark moods of ...
Written by Adrianne Lenker, [11] the song's lyrics uses negation to describe something, [12] with Lenker repeating the use of "not" or "nor" at the beginning of each line. [13] Bob Boilen of NPR described the song's subject as "the inability to describe what that something is, only to be able to explain what it is not." [14]