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On 10 July 2024, Marling released the single "Patterns", her first solo release in four years. [1] She simultaneously announced a pair of residencies at London's Hackney Church and New York's Bowery Ballroom, which would begin shortly following the album's release. [7] The single "No One's Gonna Love You Like I Can" was released on 21 August ...
5/5 Recorded in her north London home, ... On Patterns in Repeat, Laura Marling happily departs from the Joni Mitchell motherhood narrative. Helen Brown. October 25, 2024 at 4:25 AM
Laura Beatrice Marling (born 1 February 1990 [2]) is an English folk singer-songwriter. She won the Brit Award for Best British Female Solo Artist at the 2011 Brit Awards and was nominated for the same award at the 2012, 2014, 2016, and 2018 Brit Awards. Marling joined her older sisters in London at age 16 to pursue a career in music.
The discography of Laura Marling, an English folk musician, consists of eight studio albums, one live album, six extended plays and seventeen singles.She has also featured on singles by two other artists and released an EP in collaboration with Mumford and Sons and Indian collective Dharohar Project in 2010.
Song for Our Daughter, the title of the British singer-songwriter Laura Marling's 2020 album, was a shrewd prediction.Marling gave birth to a daughter in 2023, and her recently released eighth ...
Mahogany Sessions is a London-based YouTube channel founded in 2009. [2] The channel has hosted performances from artists including Billy Lockett, [ 3 ] Rhye , [ 4 ] Jack Garrett , [ 5 ] Laura Marling [ 5 ] and Roo Panes .
All Saints Church, Haggerston, also Church of All Saints, is an Anglican church in Livermere Road, near the junction with Haggerston Road, in Haggerston in London Borough of Hackney, east London. It is part of a parish with Holy Trinity Church and St Philip Dalston (demolished after bombing in World War II). [1] [2]
The church of St John at Hackney was designed by James Spiller and built in 1792, [1] when demand in the parish of Hackney was in excess of 3,000 parishioners. At an original 3,300 acres (13 km 2), at the time the parish was the largest civil parish in Middlesex of those which joined the County of London (created in 1889). [2]