Ghosts in the Garden, the new album by Kris Delmhorst, which is scheduled for release on March 7 2025 on Big Bean Music.
The first single from the album, âSomething to Showâ and accompanying video, is available now, then the second single âWonât Be Longâ, follows on January 10 and the third and final single, âNot the Only Oneâ, with accompanying narrative video, lands on February 7.
Ghosts in the Garden, the gorgeous and searching new album from Kris Delmhorst, is a layered, kaleidoscopic meditation on grief, loss, and fate. Inhabiting the songs are a host of vivid spirits made tangible: the departed and the disappeared, sins and their consequences; lost loves, missed chances, and the invisible sorrows that accompany us all. With richly observed details and finely calibrated emotional range, Delmhorst finds the wavelength that illuminates these multitudes. Having summoned them, she doesnât avert her eyes from her ghosts - or ours - but invites them into an expansive conversation about the ways weâre shaped by loss, and woven together by unseen threads of love.
Working at Great North Sound Society, a studio built into an 18th-century Maine farmhouse that no doubt harbours ghosts of its own, Delmhorst tracked live with a core band of Ray Rizzo on drums, Jeremy Moses Curtis on bass, and Erik Koskinen on guitars. Engineer Sam Kassirer added keys, and Rich Hinman contributed pedal steel. An illustrious procession of guest vocalists - AnaĂŻs Mitchell, Rose Cousins, Anna Tivel, Ana Egge, Taylor Ashton, Rachel Baiman, Jabe Beyer and Jeffrey Foucault - brings prismatic brilliance to the tracks, refracting the individual slant of each songâs light.
The stories on this record unfold from the inside out like fables, sketching archetypical characters â a fisherman recalling details of a life tethered to the margins, a soldier remembering the universe of a single day and night of love - and transforming them into proxies for our own hauntings. The darkly hypnotic âWolvesâ reckons with the mortality of parents, the ordinary and inevitable orphaning that we all face. âI see wolves / circling the fire / circling the fire with their yellow eyesâ, Delmhorst sings, steadying and challenging us to meet deathâs gaze with respect, before posing the albumâs central question: âDo you really love the story if you donât love the end?â
From the weatherworn longing of âLucky Riverâ, to âSomething to Showâ and its insomniac prayer for insight, Ghosts in the Garden explores the hidden country of grief, a land we all inhabit together but often navigate alone. Within this tender and urgent collection of songs, Delmhorst offers a place in the wilderness to gather for solace and communion: âeveryoneâs here / no oneâs goneâ.
The first single from the album, âSomething to Showâ and accompanying video, is available now, then the second single âWonât Be Longâ, follows on January 10 and the third and final single, âNot the Only Oneâ, with accompanying narrative video, lands on February 7.
ABOUT KRIS DELMHORST
Kris Delmhorst is an American songwriter, singer, instrumentalist, and producer. Over more than 25 years as an independent artist, she has built a body of work characterized by a wide-ranging, genre-agnostic curiosity and constant collaboration. In addition to nine critically acclaimed studio albums, sheâs written music for films and TV, produced albums for Session Americana and Jeremy Moses Curtis, contributed instrumentation and vocals to scores of other artistsâ work, and performed thousands of shows across the US and Europe. Kris Delmhorst lives in western Massachusetts with her husband, the songwriter Jeffrey Foucault, and their daughter.
- âbold and brilliantâ Irish Times
- âliterate and allusiveâ Boston Globe
- âmoody, euphoric and transcendentâ LA Times
- âluminously positive and life affirmingâ RNR
- âa wonder to beholdâ Klof mag
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