The lead single and title track debuts today.
Boreas, the new EP from acclaimed brother-sister duo The Oh Hellos, is set for release on September 4. Pre-save the album here: https://theohhellos.fanlink.to/Boreas-EP. In conjunction with the announcement, the band debuts the EP's lead single and title track today; listen/share it here: https://theohhellos.fanlink.to/Boreas-single
Boreas is the third EP in a series of four that was named after one of the four Greek mythological wind deities that bring the seasons. The series is driven by the overarching question: "Where did my ideas come from?" With each EP and the "wind" it represents, siblings Tyler and Maggie Heath explore the stages of answering that question. Stay tuned for the fourth installment of the series, which is set for release in the coming months.
"We felt like we needed more time to expand on our ideas than a standard LP would have given us; we like to keep each of our albums more or less contained to a single idea or theme, and we had a lot to say about this one. Releasing this music serially is also giving us time to really refine our thoughts for each EP-letting us express them as best we can, not just as quickly as we can," note Tyler and Maggie.
Below please find additional commentary from Tyler and Maggie on Boreas as well as their previously released EP's Eurus and Notos.
Boreas, the northern wind, ushers in the harsh frosts of lonely winter. The arrangements evoke images of snow-blanketed darkness, candlelight behind cupped hands, and a vast night sky ribboned with stars and auroras. As we wrote these songs, we found ourselves confronted with the ways we've reflected this-how we often avoid discomfort, even at the expense of others, until we are left cold, hard, and unfeeling. In this record, we ask the winter to instead kindle us into something warmer and softer than who we've been.
Once you've asked that first question, it opens the floodgates for more of them. Wrestling with them all can ultimately lead to a fuller understanding of the world around you and leave you with more empathy than you started with, but unfortunately can also leave you feeling alienated from the communities you used to identify with. Since Eurus was the wind most closely associated with autumn, we wanted the music to capture the feeling of dark woods, dry branches, dead leaves, and wondering who had migrated-you, or your flock?
Most of Notos is about the two of us reflecting on a time when we weren't even aware there was a question to ask. Musically, we were trying to recreate the feeling of the summers we spent exploring the Pacific Northwest with our grandparents when we were kids, as well as our experience growing up on the Texas Gulf Coast and dealing with the frequent threats of/evacuations from hurricanes-because Notos is the wind that brought violent summer storms, which felt like a good thematic parallel to the backfire effect you experience when you're confronted with new information for the first time.
The Oh Hellos began making music together in 2011 with a song written for their mother's birthday followed later that year with their self-titled, self-produced, independently released debut EP. The four-track recording featured the hit song "Hello My Old Heart," which received national airplay and currently has over 26 million streams on Spotify. Since forming, the sibling duo has built an impressive reputation for surrounding themselves with a rotating cast of pickers and players, numbering as many as 13 at any given time, often spilling into the audience.
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