LIZ LAWRENCE announces details of her forthcoming new long player ‘Pity Party’ on October 25th

LIZ LAWRENCE announces details of her forthcoming new long player ‘Pity Party’ on October 25th

Having launched her epic new pop banger of a single ‘Navigator’ just under two weeks ago, which has so far generated plays from Lauren Laverne and Huw Stephens as well as New Music Friday adds in ten countries including the UK, Liz Lawrence is pleased to announce details of her forthcoming new long player ‘Pity Party’ on October 25th.

As the lead single from the album, ‘Navigator’ is a vibrant pop-rock anthem in the making, it lays bare the truths about finding refuge in the love of another. That moment of realisation that sometimes you just need to give yourself over to the help and support being offered. The captivating visual sees Liz solo dancing to her own song in a karaoke booth. Perfectly simple and brilliantly effective:

Moments of self-awareness were the germs of the ideas of what would become Pity Party, Lawrence’s first album in seven years. Through a combination of personal experience and exploring what is happening around her, Lawrence has written, recorded and produced an unvarnished yet defiant snapshot of her world right now.

“I think almost every generation is scared that their generation is going to be the last one,” she says, adding, with a knowing pity party flourish, “but it’s quite hard to deny that it feels as if we’re hurting towards disaster.”

She wrote six of the songs that make up ‘Pity Party’ in just five days (while holed up in a dilapidated friends’ house in Cornwall) – proving that forcing herself out of her comfort zone and embracing a solitary existence – for a short time at least- reaped huge benefits for her personally and musically.

In the years since her first outing as a solo artist in 2012 (her debut album Bedroom Hero, sweet folk-pop songs that she had written as a teenager), Liz spent time finding her way again, including time as one half of a pop duo, Cash + David, and singing with her friends Bombay Bicycle Club, which took her on a two-year-long tour around the world. In terms of her solo work, Liz dug deep and discovered her own sound.

Eventually, after a few years of teaching herself how to produce, she realised that she had become good enough to make her own music in the way she wanted to make it, on her own terms. She released the first fruits of this experimental labour throughout 2018, as a series of double A-side single releases: Chainsmoking, Circling Numbers, and The Good Part. But none of these singles are on Pity Party. “The point was to clear things out, reestablish what I was up to, and what I was doing,” she says. It gave her the space she needed to rediscover her own identity, and who she was as an artist.

Having embraced this new musical identity with both arms, and judging by the calibre of songs littering ‘Pity Party’, 2019 looks set to be an exciting year in the career of this determined and talented British artist.

‘Pity Party’ – tracklisting:
Love Came Looking
But Love
Navigator
None Of My Friends
USP
Shoes
Want
Life Again
What People Do
10 Breaths
Rivers

Live Dates:

13 July || O2 Academy Birmingham || Birmingham, UK (w/ Bloc Party)
13 Aug || Huw Stephens Presents The Social August || London, UK

Xsnoize Author
Mark Millar is the founder of XS Noize and looks after the daily running of the website as well as hosting interviews for the weekly XS Noize Podcast. Mark's favourite album is Achtung Baby by U2.

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