Her long-awaited debut album Songs From A Thousand Frames Of Mind is due out September 27th.
Virginia-born, LA-based multidisciplinary artist Kate Bollinger recently announced her long awaited kaleidoscopic debut album Songs From A Thousand Frames Of Mind, due September 27th on Ghostly International. Now she shares a new song from the album, the lilting, empathetic “To Your Own Devices.” The track, which follows the previously released “Any Day Now,” finds Bollinger following a sunswept melody to deliver a series of hushed, second-person observations: “Now you’re in a pinch/The mirror makes you flinch/And all this time, were you not making sense?”
Additionally, Kate Bollinger announces a fall North American tour in support of Songs From A Thousand Frames Of Mind. See below to find a show near you, and get your tickets HERE on-sale publicly tomorrow.
Of “To Your Own Devices,” Bollinger says “In May of 2023, my friends Al, Parker (Essential Forever and Good Dog Nigel respectively) and I decided to each try and write a song a day. This is one that I wrote at that time. We recorded it on the third day of the album sessions in the Catskills, live to tape, and without headphones.”
Of the music video, co-directed by Bollinger and Nikki Milan Houston, she says “When I first moved to Los Angeles, I came across a book of old Japanese designs called MOGA, a catchword meaning ‘modern girls’ that was used to describe fashionable city women who embraced westernized modes and manners in the 1920s. In the book I found a surrealist design that depicted a woman, underwater with fish swimming around her, wearing a beautiful costume, and stirring a giant fish bowl like a pot of soup and I knew immediately that I wanted to recreate the scene for the album cover. I wrote a script for the music video and brought in filmmaker Nikki Milan Houston as my co-director and set designer. We brought in Odie Summers as set fabricator and in a friend’s studio downtown, a kitchen set was built over several days and came to life because of the distinctive skills and devotion of everyone involved.”
10/5 - Boulder CO - eTown Hall
10/7 - Minneapolis, MN - 7th St Entry
10/8 - Chicago, IL - Lincoln Hall
10/10 - Toronto, ON - Longboat Hall
10/11 - Montreal, QC - Petit Campus
10/12 - Boston, MA - Arts at The Armory
10/13 - Brattleboro, VT - Stone Church
10/15 - Brooklyn, NY - Music Hall of Williamsburg
10/17 - Philadelphia, PA - Ukie Club
10/18 - Washington, DC - Black Cat
10/19 - Charlottesville, VA - The Southern
10/21 - Carrboro, NC - Cat's Cradle (Back Room)
10/22 - Asheville, NC - Eulogy
10/24 - Atlanta, GA - The Earl
10/25 - Nashville, TN - Third Man
10/26 - St Louis, MO - Off Broadway
10/28 - Fayetteville, AR - George's Majestic Lounge
10/29 - Oklahoma City, OK - Resonant Head
10/30 - Denton, TX - Rubber Gloves
11/12 - Santa Cruz, CA - Catalyst Atrium
11/14 - Portland, OR - Wonder Ballroom
11/15 - Seattle, WA - Madame Lou's
11/16 - Vancouver, BC - Fortune Sound Club
11/20 - Sacramento, CA - Starlet Room
11/21 - San Francisco, CA - The Independent
11/22 - Los Angeles, CA - Teragram Ballroom
Inspired by pop, rock, and folk songs of the 1960s, Bollinger and her band — including collaborators Jacob Grissom, Adam Brisbin, Matthew E. White, and Sam Evian — favor the eclectic, melodic, and majestic, supporting intimate, stream-of-consciousness lyricism with classic instrumentation. It's a collection of pop songs, polished yet scrappy with an underlying punk spirit, navigating life, relationships, and growing up. Casting a collage-like vision that’s instantly memorable and uniquely mystifying, Songs From A Thousand Frames Of Mind can feel like flipping through your coolest friend’s record collection, finding a new favorite song with each discovery.
Armed with endless hooks and wildly shifting textures, Bollinger can seem as much like a songwriter as an art-house auteur, crafting the soundtrack and scenery for a non-existent movie. Bollinger studied film in college, and recently directed the striking music video for Jessica Pratt’s single “World on a String.” Fittingly Bollinger always has a hand in her visuals, and often envisions them as the songs themselves take shape.
Written during a period of transience and change, Songs From A Thousand Frames Of Mind was made to resemble a mixtape—something carefully crafted and delivered from just one person to another. In sharing this music with listeners, Bollinger took inspiration from her own formative encounters with art: quietly worshiping the early musical projects of her older brothers, attending local shows in Charlottesville and feeling empowered to write songs of her own, inheriting burned CDs from older classmates and finding a portal to another world. (Working with her friends Emma Collins and Evangeline Neuhart on the visual accompaniment, Bollinger assures the entire project feels equally communal and intuitive.) Sublimating a lifetime’s worth of musical connections into a concise 11 songs, Songs From A Thousand Frames Of Mind captures a rare sense of purpose and ambition for a debut record, managing to feel cozily familiar while still packed full of surprises. And in her gently playful and emotionally resonant performances, Bollinger sounds as enraptured by the mystery as anyone.
1. What’s This About (La La La La)
2. To Your Own Devices
3. Any Day Now
4. God Interlude
5. Lonely
6. Running
7. In A Smile
8. Postcard From A Cloud
9. I See It Now
10. Sweet Devil
11. All This Time
Photo Credit: Giraffe Studios
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