06 April 2023 - 0 Comments
Tāmaki Makaurau/Auckland based Tiny Ruins present 'Ceremony Sessions', a series of live and filmed recordings to accompany their upcoming fourth album, Ceremony. Recorded and mixed by Tom Healy, with film directed by Alexander Gandar.
Out today as a dreamy live session film, latest single Dogs Dreaming is one of most exuberant offerings thus far from Tiny Ruins. The song was written on a solo expedition to the Āwhitu Peninsula, when Hollie Fullbroook surveyed the isolated lighthouse alone at dusk. Alex Freer’s drums lay a particularly playful bedrock amidst rippling organ and forthright lead vocals from Fullbrook. Deft clusters of Cass Basil’s bass notes free-wheel between floating and sliding, while Tom Healy’s spirited guitar flourishes and additional vocals lace the song with a sort of mid-80's nostalgia.
Watch Tiny Ruins - Ceremony Sessions - Dogs Dreaming
Watch the Dorothy Bay Video
Listen to The Crab / Waterbaby
Pre-order Ceremony
Purchase Tour Tickets
To celebrate the upcoming release of their fourth album, Ceremony, Tiny Ruins recently announced an eight-date headline tour around Aotearoa this Autumn. Tickets are on sale now from Banishedmusic.com. Ceremony, out April 28th, is the much-anticipated follow-up to 2019's celebrated Olympic Girls - a finalist for the Taite Music Prize.
ABOUT CEREMONY
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 detail cultivated over the past several years, the group's greatly anticipated fourth album is out on Ba Da Bing Records, Marathon Artists, Courtney Barnett's label Milk! Records, and the band's own imprint Ursa Minor in Aotearoa/New Zealand.Ceremony has many moods, ranging from intense minimalist Diving & Soaring that evokes a classic folk vibe through to the heavier Neil Young-inspired Dorothy Bay, bop In Light of Everything, and the hooky, uplifting Dogs Dreaming. Noodly 70's electric guitars, eclectic percussion and prominent bass might 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 the band’s highest achievement, an album about confronting confusion, loss, dislocation and ultimately realising the beauty of life's unpredictable paths.
Photo Credit: Frances Carter
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