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*Free UK Delivery over £75 ---- Collect Free from your nearest Assai Records Store*
*Free UK Delivery over £75 ---- Collect from your nearest Assai Records Store*

Big Thief Capacity Vinyl LP Eco Colour Due Out 31/01/25

Original price £30.99 - Original price £30.99
Original price
£30.99
£30.99 - £30.99
Current price £30.99
Cat no. 4AD0754LP2

Please note this is a pre-order item due for release 31st January, 2025

Eco Colour

Tracklist:

  1. Pretty Things
  2. Shark Smile
  3. Capacity
  4. Watering
  5. Coma
  6. Great White Shark
  7. Mythological Beauty
  8. Objects
  9. Haley
  10. Mary
  11. Black Diamonds

The trails that Brooklyn’s Big Thief -- Adrianne Lenker (guitar, vocals), Buck Meek (guitar), Max Oleartchik (bass), and James Krivchenia (drums) -- take us down on 2017’s Capacity, the band’s highly critically acclaimed sophomore album, are overgrown with the wilderness of pumping souls.

After 2016’s stunning Masterpiece, Capacity was recorded in a snowy winter nest in upstate New York at Outlier Studio with producer Andrew Sarlo. The album jumps right into lives marked up and nipped in surprisingly swift fashion. They are peopled and unpeopled, spooked and soothed, regenerating back into a state where they can once again be vulnerable. Lenker’s songs introduce us to a gallery of multifaceted women and deal with the complicated matters of identity — at once dangerous and curious, though never unbelievable. Lenker shows us the gentle side of being ripped open. Tricked into love, done in and then witnessing the second act of pulling oneself back together to prepare for it to all happen again, but this time to a sturdier soul, one who is going to take the punches better than ever before and deal some jabs and roundhouses of their own.

The album is thick with raw, un-doctored beauty: most of the songs on Capacity were played for the rest time in the studio and were recorded the same day. “There is a darker darkness and a lighter light on this album,” Lenker explains. “The songs search for a deeper level of self-acceptance, to embrace the world within and without. I think Masterpiece began that process, as a reaction from inside the pain, whereas I feel Capacity examines the pain from the outside.”