London based singer songwriter Daniel Gadd shares new single and video 'Can't Stop The Leaves'

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New album About Strange Lands and People out November 3rd

"Absolutely lovely" 

- Mark Radcliffe, BBC Radio 6 Music

 

“a similar impact on me as Bon Iver’s For Emma, Forever Ago: a songwriter isolated among the elements with his memories who emerges with a mesmerising collection of songs.” 

- MOJO

 

“The track takes a variety of influences and packages them neatly in an acoustic-driven, folky parcel, with the sounds of Bob Dylan and Bon Iver floating in the background.” 

- The Most Radicalist

South African-born and London-based alternative singer/songwriter Daniel Gadd is set to release his second studio album About Strange Lands and People on November 3rd. Today he has shared album opener and new single 'Can't Stop The Leaves' alongside a music video directed by Anna Francesca Jennings.

 

“‘Can’t Stop The Leaves’ is a parting of the ways song. I was trying to capture a very specific moment at the end of a relationship – the moment when the time for talking has ended and the decisive break is made” says Gadd. "We wanted to compliment the song with a simple video and the style we chose is influenced a lot by French New Wave cinema, particularly the films of Jean-Luc Godard. So there are a few not-so-subtle nods to those movies in some of the shots we used and the way we edited. Jessica Cogan, the lead actress, did a great job of channeling her inner Anna Karina. The restaurant scene and the outdoor shots were all filmed in Soho, London over the course of one very long day, which also happened to be one of the hottest days of the year. Our Director of Photography, Charles Mori, worked a lot of magic behind and away from the camera to capture intimate moments and create a cohesive tone throughout all the locations."

 

In 2015, Daniel Gadd was 25 and living in a small fishing village on the coast of Cape Town. With only a guitar, harmonica and a couple of borrowed microphones, he recorded a set of eight intimate songs. That first album, As If in a Dream I Drifted at Sea, would go on to be described in Mojo Magazine by writer Sylvie Simmons as having had “a similar impact on me as Bon Iver’s For Emma, Forever Ago: a songwriter isolated among the elements with his memories who emerges with a mesmerising collection of songs.”

 

About Strange Lands and People is a new collection of songs — soft-spoken, warm, nostalgic and dreamlike. Much like his debut, the album was originally recorded solo back in 2018, in a beautiful old church in the Northamptonshire countryside. “On the second morning, a local woman walked in with her family and cheerily asked us what we were up to. It turned out to be Geri Halliwell and when she left she said “Good luck with your music.” So in a very real sense this album has been blessed by a Spice Girl… in a church,” says Gadd.

 

“Though I loved those solo, acoustic recordings, I felt that the songs were calling out for more players. So I somehow convinced my producer Jonjo Keefe to do it all over again, but this time in the studio with a band. In 2022 we produced the record together, adding to the arrangements and shaping the songs into their final form,” he continues.

 

Recorded at The Premises Studios in London, the folk influences and gentle, reflective nature of Gadd’s debut album are still there, but they’ve evolved into something a little less fragile and sparse. Each song is a kind of vignette — a window into a different place, time or personality. This album is the work of an artist who observes things, who uses music and poetry to try and find his own place in the world.

 

On About Strange Lands and People Gadd draws influence from artists such as Leif Vollebekk, Laura Marling, Adrianne Lenker, The Tallest Man on Earth, Bob Dylan and Leonard Cohen. Thematically, there’s a sense of “wandering” woven throughout the album’s 10 tracks. Whether it’s about a relationship, a friendship, a feeling of being out of place or even a feeling of being in the right place, each track in its own way seems to deal with the fact that the search has to continue and never really ends.

Tracklist

 Can't Stop The Leaves

The Painter

Shepherd's Star

A Scene From Some Old Poem

First Goodbye

A Statue Part-Concealed

April Sky

At the Edge of the World

Things Always Break

About Strange Lands and People

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