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The Brazen Youth Share '1TL2DU4 (Feat. girlpuppy)'

The Brazen Youth's new album is due out September 16th.

By: Aug. 18, 2022
The Brazen Youth Share '1TL2DU4 (Feat. girlpuppy)'  Image
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The Brazen Youth share their new single "1TL2DU4 (Feat. girlpuppy)", the latest song from their forthcoming full-length album Eagle, Idaho, due out September 16th. The song is paired with a music video made with their friends Jenny and Josh of SNXKFilms.

The aim of the video explains the band's Nic Lussier, "was to document the strange intertwinement between emotion and monotony of tour life." The video draws from the band's experience following the fateful day they got a call that band member Charles Dahlke's dad had passed away while they were on a brief stopover in a small town in Idaho.

"We decided to finish the tour despite the terrible news, and we ended up naming our album after that town," says Lussier. "The video is meant to capture the sort of life we were living, detached from everyday routine, but still susceptible to the shattering glass of reality."

The fourteen track full-length LP continues upon the path the Lyme, CT trio set for themselves with this past October's Changing EP. The record was born out of shared experience as three friends confronted a beloved parent's sudden passing, and navigated the early years of an adulthood stilted by the warped reality of the pandemic.

"1TL2DU4 (Feat. girlpuppy)" comes on the heels of the band's previous single "If These Wild Winds Are Yours" featuring the artist Alix Page, which was featured in Uproxx's "Best New Indie" column.

Eagle, Idaho is the namesake of The Brazen Youth's new album, but might have well remained an anonymous collection of subdivisions to the band and their listeners if not for a fateful phone call. The band were on the road with a few days off in the suburb nestled in the Boise Foothills when they got word the father of band member Charles Dahlke had passed away. They had all been living with the elder Dahlke for the past couple of years, so the news hit them collectively as the loss of a certain foundation of the group. "It felt like things were going to be different from that moment on," remembers Micah Rubin, "and they were."

And for long time fans of the band, the change will certainly be palpable. Having just escaped the bounds of high school at the time, The Brazen Youth's early releases are colored and influenced by a kind of wonder and expectation preceding the new experiences and adventures that lay ahead of them in life.

Eagle, Idaho on the other hand, sees the group stepping through the looking glass into adulthood, perhaps a little sooner and suddenly than one might hope to, and carries the weight of the ensuing years and life events that followed.

As they have with past releases, The Brazen Youth recorded the new album at Charlie's Ashlawn Recording Company studios at Ashlawn Farm. The studio itself has grown up with the band, as has Charlie's production prowess, to the point where musicians now come cross country to record there.

But for nearly two months, The Brazen Youth had the studio to themselves, and woke up every day to record something new for Eagle, Idaho. Along the way they were heavily influenced by the freeness and liberty they heard on records like the Charles Mingus and Joni Mitchell collaboration Mingus, Paul Simon's Graceland, the discography of Arthur Russell and Big Thief's Two Hands.

The record was entirely produced by the band, but inspired by Great Grandpa's Four of Arrows, they reached out to that album's producer/mixer Mike Vernon Davis to mix Eagle, Idaho.

Making peace with the internal and external chaos of life can seem daunting, but The Brazen Youth create a world with sound and lyricism that while certainly not answering life's great questions, goes a long way to setting the listener more at ease with not knowing.

"I think I've realized that the goal of my life is not to be happy," reflects the group's Nic Lussier, "happiness is an inevitably fleeting state. So that goal appears unrealistic. I think my true ambition in life is to simply be at peace. That's a theme that has found its way into the album, and into our songwriting as a band as we've gotten a little older."

That's not to say Eagle, Idaho is a capitulation to time's cruel march, but rather as the band describe it, "a reflection and romanticization of a prior life while coming to an acceptance of imperfect love and naked reality."

The Brazen Youth are a band formed within the otherworldly vacuum of the 300-year-old Ashlawn Farm, located in Lyme, Connecticut and consisting of Nic Lussier, Charles Dahlke and Micah Rubin.

Watch the new music video here:



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