Georgia Ruth new album due7 October 2016

Album release:  'Fossil Scale' by Georgia Ruth
Release date: 7 October 2016
Label: Navigator Records
More info: Artist website

Welsh singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist Georgia Ruth has announced a new album 'Fossil Scale', due for release on October 7, 2016 via Navigator Records. The record is the follow up to 2013’s Welsh Music Prize winning Week Of Pines - a feat Georgia never contemplated she’d achieve for her critically acclaimed, bilingual debut album. The record prompted The  Guardian to tip her as ‘One of the British folk discoveries of the year’, with Georgia going on to be twice nominated in the 2014 BBC Radio 2 Folk Awards, alongside radio support across Radio 1 and 6Music. UK live dates to support the release of 'Fossil Scale' are expected to be announced shortly. 
 
'Fossil Scale' was written in Caernarfon, a town in North Wales defined by its space and tranquil landscape that Georgia, at the time, called home. The ancient surroundings of the town– its body of water and the neighbouring Snowdonia mountains - came to exert as strong a bearing on 'Fossil Scale' as the hours of Beck, Radiohead and Bowie albums that tracked this writing period. Though it wasn’t until Georgia stumbled upon a news article about a mysterious ‘mutant-fish’ - with reptilian head & fossilised scales- discovered by Russian fishermen, that she began to quantify her own life in relation to her immutable surroundings. This fish became something of a representation of those constants, as Georgia began to explore the detachment from them that modern life had brought about. 
 
Switching out her previous go-to writing tool- the harp- for a piano in search of a more expansive yet ambient sound, Georgia headed into the familiar setting of Snowdonia’s Bryn Derwen Studio in January 2015, to lay down the foundations of what would become Fossil Scale. When the sale of the studio just 5 days into recording threw plans awry, recording time was then split between studios in London and Cardiff – in the case of the latter, at friends and collaborators Manic Street Preachers’ Faster Studios (Georgia sung on ‘Divine Youth’, a track that featured on the Manics’ Futurology album). The album was finally pieced together in Mwnci Studios, co-produced with Italian producer Marta Salogni (Phil Selway, Eliot Sumner) and long-time collaborator David Wrench (Caribou, Bat For Lashes) some 11 months after those initial sessions began. 

During the year long period of recording, Georgia herself also relocated from Caernarfon to Cardiff- a move she considers pivotal to the album’s development, enabling her to further explore themes of detachment as she moved and lived around the world’s quiet constants. The comparative clamour of city life prompted those songs written in the quiet of Caernarfon to shed skin and inhabit a different world, mirroring Georgia’s own move. Thus, Fossil Scale is a marked progression in song-writing and style, driven heavily by keys, synths, guitars and layered recorders, alongside an Indian stringed instrument called the sarangi. The latter came about following an introduction to Hindustani classical music during time spent on The British Council's 'Folk Nations' project in Kolkata, where Georgia met James Yorkston-collaborator Suhail Yusuf Khan, who fittingly went on to play the instrument on Fossil Scale. In particular, tracks like the brass-capped ‘Good Milk’ and the album’s playful title track bear the stunning effects of this augmented instrumentation and layering, marking an adept departure from the more traditional folk foundations of ‘Grand Tour’, and the songs which comprised Week of Pines. 
 
Georgia currently still finds time to present regularly for the BBC’s Welsh-speaking radio arm BBC Cymru, where the selections during her 3 hour weekly programme champion not only the camaraderie felt between Welsh musicians, but the language itself. It’s little surprise then, that Fossil Scale is imbued with both- Georgia dips into her native Welsh on a sparsely tender cover of Meic Stevens’ ‘Sylvia’, whilst school-friend Meilyr Jones sings on the title track, ‘The Doldrums’ and ‘When I Was Blue’.  
 
Ultimately, whilst 'Fossil Scale' is a homage to the world’s, and life’s inscrutable constants, it is more pertinently a snapshot which captures Georgia Ruth as a young artist in unmistakeable transition. 

Press reaction to date

“A dazzling debut, rich with sweet pain and joy” - The Independent **** 

“Her own debut is a wonder, full of longing and melody” - MOJO **** 

“It could have been made in 1968, in the loveliest possible way” - Indy on Sunday **** 

“One of the British folk discoveries of the year” - The Guardian

“Heaven.” - Lauren Laverne, 6Music

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