Brudenell Presents... With support from - Cleo Reed 14+ (under 18s to
be accompanied by an adult) "My career has been a lesson in patience,"
says Annahstasia, having cultivated her musical language between
blazes of intimacy and independence across different lives, locations,
and iterations, loves lost and gained, expectations evaded and
recreated. The rising troubadour's proximity to love — for and from
others, in society at large, and deeply within herself — guides the
spirit of her soulful, poetic folk songcraft. Love is the elemental
constant, alongside her distinctly resonant voice, shading the
singer-songwriter's music since her earliest self-taught recordings,
back when a 17-year-old Annahstasia Enuke was discovered and propelled
into the pressures of an industry that nearly stifled her greatest
strengths. Artistic resilience, gratitude, and dedication to process
have yielded Tether, Annahstasia's full-length debut on art-forward
indie label drink sum wtr, a collection of beaming torch songs,
orchestral hymns, and astral anthems that feel lived-in, drawn from
the human experience and the spectrum of love. Annahstasia assembled
the pieces of Tether slowly and with deep intention; she's carried
these songs with her on the road, sang them for friends and strangers,
and evolved them over time alongside her personal revelations. "The
song is written, and then I have to live with it and see if I really
believe what I'm saying," she explains. She brought material to
sessions at the storied Valentine Studios in Los Angeles, joined by
producers Jason Lader (ANOHNI and the Johnsons, Frank Ocean, Lana Del
Rey), Andrew Lappin (Cassandra Jenkins, L'Rain, Luna Li), and Aaron
Liao (Liv.e, Moses Sumney, Raveena) and a range of accomplished
musicians, including featured guests aja monet and Obongjayar. The
recording became instinctual, done only in live takes to capture the
feeling of the room, the community of the music. The sequencing was
just as essential; she arrived at a flow with shifting energies and
poignant arcs. The instrumentation swells, at times understated and
others supremely lush, and through each arrangement, Annahstasia's
voice rings true, open-hearted, and free. "I've come into the power of
my voice as a medium," she says. "As a tool of expression, I am able
to shape the emotional space around me." Lyrically, Annahstasia
embraces the nuance of poetry, inviting listeners to engage in words
laced with meaning, whether ruminations on romance or social
constructs. She sees the opener "Be Kind" more as a poem than a song,
"a reflection upon the beauty of the mundane and the grandeur of
everyday life…a reminder to myself and others to be kind to each
other." The track's minimalist atmosphere picks up where 2024's
Surface Tension EP left off, with her vocals left bare and up-front,
exploring the capacity of her gift with newfound latitude as strums,
strings, and keys enter the frame. The palette expands for "Villian,"
welcoming drums, brass, and horns into a sweeping nod to healing. "We
are all made of both shadow and light. From some angle, we have all
been the villain of the story," she adds, suggesting that often, the
only way to move on is through understanding that "we are all trying
our best, negotiating survival." At its triumphant peak, above
gospel-like shouts, she delivers the reprise with a smile: "Take it /
Take it back / This dull knife of memory / I still hear your voice
inside my head / Says that I'm the villain of the story." Album
centerpiece "Slow" emerges from a chance connection with London-based
Nigerian musician Steven Umoh, aka Obongjayar. After exchanging DMs,
Obongjayar came to one of her shows, and the two artists talked for
hours afterward; "he was like a lost brother," she says. Later, they
wrote and demoed the track in the living room of her Airbnb in London,
where they huddled around a single ribbon microphone. "I'm just
playing the guitar, and our eyes are locked; it was very sensual and
intense." Emboldened by one another, their voices orbit and coalesce,
trading verses on the signals the universe sends us ("I heard it on
the wind / To go slow"), harmonizing the last stanzas ("What's the
worst that can happen / If we just let it happen"). Without proper
album plans at the time, the song sat for a while; then, in another
cosmic chance, Obongjayar happened to be in town during the Tether
sessions. Annahstasia reflects, "It was a beautiful experience to have
us all in the room. The artistry, the moment, a real acceptance of
African art where these two Nigerian musicians are coming together and
making something very tender and pretty outside genre expectations."
Later, Annahstasia finds a kindred spirit in aja monet, the NY-based
surrealist blues poet and her new labelmate, who lends stunning prose
and voice to "All is. Will Be. As it Was." Given only the prompt of
"open air," monet wrote the lines on the ride to the studio. Together
with Annahstasia on guitar and Ashley Fulton on piano, they captured
the piece in its purest form as if bottling a breeze. Annahstasia
described the EP prelude to this culminating set as a "romantic war,"
and the artist truly thrives amidst and after drama. She taps into a
punk sensibility for "Silk and Velvet" — "I'd say it's punk in the
sense that it is really dry, really stark and selectively dissonant."
A clashing of cello and piano mirror pointed lyrics about "living with
the hypocrisy of having revolutionary ideologies but consumerist
tendencies." The tension comes full circle on "Believer," a song she's
been trying to get right for years, now finally recorded in the right
place with the right people. Nearly every instrument on Tether returns
in full force; towering percussion, jagged guitar lines, and howling
singers encircle Annahstasia at the mic as she enters a fantasy of
rock stardom. "I love how in making a record, you get to make a film
and pick which direction to take it. Now I have this version that I
blast in my headphones, play air guitar, and pretend I'm performing it
for 100,000 people." The sheer power of Tether is the result of
patience, and it's not hard to picture such a dream realized in good
time.
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15/12/2025 Last update