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LAEL NEALE

Lael Neale

Altogether Stranger

    Lael Neale’s minimalist drone pop draws inspiration from the Transcendentalists, the alienation of modern life, and a rich array of musical influences—ranging from Dionne Warwick and John Lennon to primitive American gospel and Spacemen 3. Her expansive new record, 'Altogether Stranger' was written and recorded in the early morning quiet of Los Angeles. Clocking in at just 32 minutes, the 9-song LP covers an unexpected breadth of musical and lyrical terrain—from garage rock nursery rhymes and creation myths to Motorik dance dirges and solitary Omnichord meditations.

    A brilliant lyricist, Neale has a unique ability to uncover the extraordinary within the mundane, tackling themes of polarity that recur throughout her work—country vs. city, humanity vs. technology, isolation vs. society. This album is her third collaboration with producer Guy Blakeslee who helps expand the tonal palette while staying true to Neale’s commitment to the raw immediacy and hand-made intimacy of home recording. 'Altogether Stranger' - a stunning album filled with dreamlike reverie, Neale’s crystalline voice, and echoes of the Velvet Underground - was conceived after four years of oscillating between rural solitude and urban chaos. It finds Neale perched at the piano in a hilltop bungalow, looking down on a rare curve of Sunset Blvd. Here, in this daily ritual of writing, singing, and painting—what David Lynch referred to as “the Art Life”—she creates the space for her most adventurous work to date.

    Born and raised in Virginia’s idyllic countryside, Neale brought the high-lonesome sound of her home state with her when she moved to California to pursue music. After years of writing songs on guitar and playing small venues in Los Angeles, she discovered the Omnichord in 2019, which sparked a new creative direction. This led to her 2021 Sub Pop debut album, 'Acquainted With Night'. That album’s 2023 follow-up, 'Star Eaters Delight', deepened the collaboration with Blakeslee, infusing minimalist soundscapes with a heightened electric energy. The album found a devoted audience, and Neale’s subsequent tour included sold-out shows in Los Angeles, New York City, London, and Paris, multiple trips across Europe, and a West Coast run supporting kindred spirit Weyes Blood. This marked yet another return to Los Angeles. Indeed, Los Angeles is not just the backdrop of 'Altogether Stranger' but a lead character. The album’s accompanying film - created with Neale's faithful Sony Handycam - builds on her ongoing series of videos, telling the story of Neale as an alien in a suit of mirrors stranded on Earth. Wandering through modern-day LA, she finds both absurdity and beauty in our fragile, untenable way of life. Over the long year it took to write Altogether Stranger, Neale vacillated between childlike optimism and existential melancholy. While she may not have been able to reconcile these opposing states, Altogether Stranger represents an ambitious breakthrough for this singular, self-sufficient artist.

    STAFF COMMENTS

    Darryl says: Four albums in and Sub Pop recording artist Lael Neale finally breaks into the Piccadilly End Of Year chart! Clocking in at just 32 minutes it’s a wonderfully crafted album, its brevity in keeping with Neale’s minimalist drone-pop sensibility; less is most certainly more on ‘Altogether Stranger’.

    Lael Neale grew up on a farm in rural Virginia before feeling the pull of Los Angeles’ bright lights in 2011, then the pandemic hit and she retreated back to Virginia. It was there in her rural isolation that she wrote and recorded her 2023 album ‘Star Eaters’. ‘Altogether Stranger' captures her return to Los Angeles and the tension between its magnetic artistic energy and its overwhelming chaos. Neale reflects on the city’s dual nature - the inspiration and madness of a sprawling metropolis, the allure of creation alongside the hollow consumerism and deep melancholy that often pervade urban life.

    Throughout the otherworldly ‘Altogether Stranger’, the ghosts of The Velvet Underground, Spacemen 3, and the wistful unease of Syd Barrett’s solo years drift in and out of focus. Standout moments include opener “Wild Waters,” with its synthetic handclaps, motorik pulse, and sugar-sweet vocals; the urgent mechanical thrum and majestic dreamscape of “Down On The Freeway”; the slow-burning ascent of “Tell Me How to Be Here,” that recalls the VU’s “Ocean”; and the mesmerising spiritualness of the hypnotic “New Age”.

    Full of brittle lyrical honesty and meditative instrumentation, ‘Altogether Stranger’ is a maximinimal masterpiece.

    TRACK LISTING

    1. Wild Waters
    2. All Good Things Will Come To Pass
    3. Down On The Freeway
    4. Sleep Through The Long Night
    5. Come On
    6. Tell Me How To Be Here
    7. New Ages
    8. All Is Never Lost
    9. There From Here

    Lael Neale

    Star Eaters Delight

      Lael Neale still has a flip phone and there were no screens involved in the creation of her new record Star Eaters Delight. The album is her second for Sub Pop and reveals an expansion of her sonic collaboration with producer and accompanist Guy Blakeslee. In April of 2020, in the wake of transformations both personal and global, Lael moved from Los Angeles back to her family’s farm in rural Virginia. Looking at the world from a distance and getting in tune with her own rhythms, she wrote and recorded steadily for two dreamlike years, driven by a need to make order out of chaos. Forged in isolation, Star Eaters Delight is a vehicle for returning, not just to civilization, but to celebration. She says, “Acquainted with Night (recorded in 2019, and released in 2021), was focused inward, amidst the loud and bright Los Angeles surrounding me. It was an attempt to create spaciousness and quiet reverie within. When I moved back to the farm, I found that the unbroken silences compelled me to break them with sound. This album is more external. It is me reaching back out to the world, wanting to feel connected, to wake up, to come together again.” Album opener and lead single “I Am The River” melts the ice with a dynamic explosion of minimalist transcendental pop clearly descended from the Velvet Underground’s branch of modern music’s family tree.

      Blakeslee’s spare yet cinematic arrangements create an ambient space in which Neale’s clear and unaffected voice can explore familiar themes in an unexpected way. Subtle but potent references to Shakespeare, Emerson and the Bible (which she hasn’t read) swirl together with deeply personal musings and touches of wry humor, always more optimistic than cynical. While this is a record about polarities- country vs. city, humanity vs. technology, solitude vs. relationship - the deeper intention is to heal; to come to terms with our differences and put the broken pieces back together again. Lael’s affinity with the Transcendentalists has to do with her quest to hold onto sovereignty over her own mind. In a time when our devices are constantly flooding us with information, opinions and propaganda, Lael is intentional about what she takes in - hence the flip phone and the cassette recorder. Neale identifies as a minimalist “not because I don’t like things, but because I value freedom more.”

      TRACK LISTING

      I Am The River
      If I Had No Wings
      Faster Than The Medicine
      In Verona
      Must Be Tears
      No Holds Barred
      Return To Me Now
      Lead Me Blind

      Lael Neale

      Acquainted With Night

        It is the simple thing that is so hard to do. This is the paradox that musician Lael Neale has lived within throughout her development as an artist. It is the reason she became enthralled with poetry. Poems are a distillation. Lael says, “this challenge to winnow away what is unessential is the most maddening and, ultimately, rewarding part of writing a song.” Lael’s new album Acquainted With Night is a testament to this poetic devotion. Stripped of any extraneous word or sound, the songs are lit by Lael’s crystalline voice which lays on a lush bed of Omnichord.

        The collection touches on themes that have been thread into her work for years: isolation, mortality, yearning, and reaching ever toward the transcendent experience. Lael grew up on a farm in rural Virginia, but for nearly 10 years called Los Angeles home. Those years were spent developing her songwriting and performing in venues across the city, but the right way to record the songs proved more elusive. She says, “Every time I reached the end of recording, I felt the songs had been stripped of their vitality in the process of layering drums, bass, guitar, violin, and organ over them. They felt weighed down.” In a moment of illumination the solution presented itself: do the simple thing. In early 2019, in the midst of major transition, she acquired a new instrument, the omnichord, and began recording a deluge of songs.

        Guy Blakeslee, who had been an advocate for years, set up a cassette recorder in her bedroom and provided empathic guidance, subtle yet affecting accompaniment and engineering prowess. Limited to only 4-tracks and first takes, Lael had to surrender some of her perfectionism to deliver the songs in their essence. The first song she recorded was “For No One For Now,” which calls to mind the agitated beat of driving fast on the freeway against the backdrop of the San Fernando Valley’s bent palms. The song contrasts romantic idealizations with the banality of folding sheets and toasting bread. It highlights her oft-thwarted attempts to enjoy the day to day while her mind wanders off toward the dream, the ideal.

        While Lael returned to her family farm in April 2020, Los Angeles is a player on this album, and “Every Star Shivers in the Dark” is an ode to the sprawling city, the outskirts of Eden. One can envision her walking from Dodgers Stadium to downtown, observing strangers and her own strangeness but determined to find communion with others. “Blue Vein” is her personal anthem, a Paul Revere piece that gallops through the town as a strident declamation. It is an amalgam of thoughts, concerns, and lessons as she nearly speaks the words, unmasked by flourishes, ensuring the meaning cuts through. Normally a morning person, Lael recorded most of these songs in the darkening of the early evening, and so became Acquainted With Night.

        STAFF COMMENTS

        Barry says: Neale presents an album full of slow-rock melancholy, brittle honestly and down to earth observations, brilliantly wrapped in a shell of minimalistic instrumentation and flexible vocal performances. Sonically hypnotic and thoroughly enthralling.

        TRACK LISTING

        1. Blue Vein
        2. Every Star Shivers In The Dark
        3. Acquainted With Night
        4. White Wings
        5. How Far Is It To The Grave
        6. For No One For Now
        7. Sliding Doors & Warm Summer Roses
        8. Third Floor Window
        9. Let Me Live By The Side Of The Road
        10. Some Sunny Day


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