
Andy Jenkins Since Always Vinyl LP 2025
1. Sunshine
2. Blue Mind
3. Leaving Before
4. I Walked into the Wrong Place
5. Salt for Morning
6. Nobody Else
7. Waltz for Morning
8. Emptiness Is
9. Lovesick
10. Pale Green Tower
11. Too Late
Andy Jenkins new album Since Always came from letting goâof self-perceptions, of expectations, of assumptions. Jenkins found space to trust himself as the guitarist for his own songs, and producer Nick Sanborn stepped into a new kind of production role, dreaming up ideas and filtering through them together. There was, in short, a very adult trust to it all, two fans working in tandem to make something; a record where the loss and love, compromise and gain of adulthood come into full view. Both busy pieces of their respective but intertwined music scenes in Richmond and Durham, Jenkins and Sanborn had been fans of one another for years but had never formally collaborated. Jenkins had spent a few years gathering songs for the follow-up to his 2018 debut, Sweet Bunch; the new ones were intricately rendered odes to the assorted assurances and anxieties that can come with finding some measure of contentment as you cross into yours 30s. Donât send demos, Sanborn suggested; simply drive the two hours down, and live in the studio for two weeks while spring drifted into the South. As Jenkins rolled through his tracks, Sanborn listened and allowed his imagination to run wild and flooded Jenkins with ideasârhythmic shifts, keyboard flourishes, vocal effects. There was double-time piano, a mistake dropped into âToo Lateâ they both loved. There was the Vocoder selection during âEmptiness Is,â a choice that allowed the pair to hang so much of the song on bass and drums alone. There was the sequence that bubbles beneath âLeaving Before,â a mirror of the lyrical nervous heart. When Amelia Meath and Flock of Dimesâ Jenn Wasner were palling around the studio, Sanborn asked if they would mind singing on a few tracks. Thatâs Meath on âBlue Mind,â sweetly trailing Jenkinsâ lines about being under loveâs spell like sheâs offering an incantation, and Wasner rising through the static dawn of âLovesick.â âAndy wanted someone to make decisions he would never make,â remembers Sanborn. âIt was this mining operation we got to do together.â As the songs steadily cohered, though, Jenkins insisted it was finally time to drop his guitars. âI have never been a particularly competent guitar player,â he says now with a little laugh, but Sanborn loved the idiosyncratic way his strums sat against his voice, so he stalled. Theyâd need to wait for Jenkinsâ longtime collaborator, an ace named Alan Parker, to come down from Richmond and replace those parts. When Parker did, he heard the same thing as Sanbornâyes, he was more technically proficient, but his overdubs didnât have the same personality, the same narrative truth. Jenkins relented, so his guitars stayed and anchor the album.
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Andy Jenkins Since Always Vinyl LP 2025
1. Sunshine
2. Blue Mind
3. Leaving Before
4. I Walked into the Wrong Place
5. Salt for Morning
6. Nobody Else
7. Waltz for Morning
8. Emptiness Is
9. Lovesick
10. Pale Green Tower
11. Too Late
Andy Jenkins new album Since Always came from letting goâof self-perceptions, of expectations, of assumptions. Jenkins found space to trust himself as the guitarist for his own songs, and producer Nick Sanborn stepped into a new kind of production role, dreaming up ideas and filtering through them together. There was, in short, a very adult trust to it all, two fans working in tandem to make something; a record where the loss and love, compromise and gain of adulthood come into full view. Both busy pieces of their respective but intertwined music scenes in Richmond and Durham, Jenkins and Sanborn had been fans of one another for years but had never formally collaborated. Jenkins had spent a few years gathering songs for the follow-up to his 2018 debut, Sweet Bunch; the new ones were intricately rendered odes to the assorted assurances and anxieties that can come with finding some measure of contentment as you cross into yours 30s. Donât send demos, Sanborn suggested; simply drive the two hours down, and live in the studio for two weeks while spring drifted into the South. As Jenkins rolled through his tracks, Sanborn listened and allowed his imagination to run wild and flooded Jenkins with ideasârhythmic shifts, keyboard flourishes, vocal effects. There was double-time piano, a mistake dropped into âToo Lateâ they both loved. There was the Vocoder selection during âEmptiness Is,â a choice that allowed the pair to hang so much of the song on bass and drums alone. There was the sequence that bubbles beneath âLeaving Before,â a mirror of the lyrical nervous heart. When Amelia Meath and Flock of Dimesâ Jenn Wasner were palling around the studio, Sanborn asked if they would mind singing on a few tracks. Thatâs Meath on âBlue Mind,â sweetly trailing Jenkinsâ lines about being under loveâs spell like sheâs offering an incantation, and Wasner rising through the static dawn of âLovesick.â âAndy wanted someone to make decisions he would never make,â remembers Sanborn. âIt was this mining operation we got to do together.â As the songs steadily cohered, though, Jenkins insisted it was finally time to drop his guitars. âI have never been a particularly competent guitar player,â he says now with a little laugh, but Sanborn loved the idiosyncratic way his strums sat against his voice, so he stalled. Theyâd need to wait for Jenkinsâ longtime collaborator, an ace named Alan Parker, to come down from Richmond and replace those parts. When Parker did, he heard the same thing as Sanbornâyes, he was more technically proficient, but his overdubs didnât have the same personality, the same narrative truth. Jenkins relented, so his guitars stayed and anchor the album.
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1. Sunshine
2. Blue Mind
3. Leaving Before
4. I Walked into the Wrong Place
5. Salt for Morning
6. Nobody Else
7. Waltz for Morning
8. Emptiness Is
9. Lovesick
10. Pale Green Tower
11. Too Late
Andy Jenkins new album Since Always came from letting goâof self-perceptions, of expectations, of assumptions. Jenkins found space to trust himself as the guitarist for his own songs, and producer Nick Sanborn stepped into a new kind of production role, dreaming up ideas and filtering through them together. There was, in short, a very adult trust to it all, two fans working in tandem to make something; a record where the loss and love, compromise and gain of adulthood come into full view. Both busy pieces of their respective but intertwined music scenes in Richmond and Durham, Jenkins and Sanborn had been fans of one another for years but had never formally collaborated. Jenkins had spent a few years gathering songs for the follow-up to his 2018 debut, Sweet Bunch; the new ones were intricately rendered odes to the assorted assurances and anxieties that can come with finding some measure of contentment as you cross into yours 30s. Donât send demos, Sanborn suggested; simply drive the two hours down, and live in the studio for two weeks while spring drifted into the South. As Jenkins rolled through his tracks, Sanborn listened and allowed his imagination to run wild and flooded Jenkins with ideasârhythmic shifts, keyboard flourishes, vocal effects. There was double-time piano, a mistake dropped into âToo Lateâ they both loved. There was the Vocoder selection during âEmptiness Is,â a choice that allowed the pair to hang so much of the song on bass and drums alone. There was the sequence that bubbles beneath âLeaving Before,â a mirror of the lyrical nervous heart. When Amelia Meath and Flock of Dimesâ Jenn Wasner were palling around the studio, Sanborn asked if they would mind singing on a few tracks. Thatâs Meath on âBlue Mind,â sweetly trailing Jenkinsâ lines about being under loveâs spell like sheâs offering an incantation, and Wasner rising through the static dawn of âLovesick.â âAndy wanted someone to make decisions he would never make,â remembers Sanborn. âIt was this mining operation we got to do together.â As the songs steadily cohered, though, Jenkins insisted it was finally time to drop his guitars. âI have never been a particularly competent guitar player,â he says now with a little laugh, but Sanborn loved the idiosyncratic way his strums sat against his voice, so he stalled. Theyâd need to wait for Jenkinsâ longtime collaborator, an ace named Alan Parker, to come down from Richmond and replace those parts. When Parker did, he heard the same thing as Sanbornâyes, he was more technically proficient, but his overdubs didnât have the same personality, the same narrative truth. Jenkins relented, so his guitars stayed and anchor the album.












