
Gia Margaret - Singing (LP)
Every artist has to discover their voice. Gia Margaret didnââ¬â¢t find herself until she lost hers. With a vocal injury that kept her from singing for years, she developed other musical languages, mastering the grammar of an intricate, homey form of ambient music pioneered by Ernest Hood and perfected by The Books. Now, her physical voice healed and her artistic voice honed, she comes full circle with Singing, her first vocal album since 2018ââ¬â¢s Thereââ¬â¢s Always Glimmer. Led by soft piano lines that fall like breath on glass, the music on Singing evidences the same jewelerââ¬â¢s sensitivity to detail that she developed in her silence.
ââ¬ÅThere was a time when I really didnââ¬â¢t know if I would sing again. So once I healed, there was a lot of internal pressure to come back strong,ââ¬Â Margaret says. ââ¬ÅI didnââ¬â¢t know who I was anymore. So it felt like beginning again, and reconnecting with these very old, old parts of myself.ââ¬Â This feeling of intermixed alienation and rediscovery is palpable across the album. In opener ââ¬ÅEveryone Around Me Dancing,ââ¬Â she watches a party from the wings, aware of how her body keeps her from communal joy while also providing new modes of self-knowledge. Shut out from the scene, she is ââ¬Åcloser to the ground, the planet.ââ¬Â In ââ¬ÅAlive Inside,ââ¬Â sheââ¬â¢s so far away from the source that sheââ¬â¢s praying to whoever might hear (ââ¬Åa god, a friend thatââ¬â¢s gone, a spiritââ¬Â). As her voice rises, it seems to be trapped in a web of distortion; itââ¬â¢s as if in her pursuit, sheââ¬â¢s pushing at the very boundaries of what can be said.
The process of making Singing was one of learning how to trust each of those feelings. The album was partially recorded in London with Frou Frouââ¬â¢s Guy Sigsworth, who helped Margaret unify the spree of ideas she had for ââ¬ÅGood Friend,ââ¬Â an album highlight that includes Gregorian chant by ILÃ⬠and turntable scratches, among many other things. David Bazan and Amy Millan also make appearances, as do Kurt Vile and Sean Carey, while Margaretââ¬â¢s longtime collaborator Doug Saltzman plays on and co-produces much of the record. Deb Talan, previously of The Weepies, lends her voice, piano, and guitar to the album's closingââ¬âand definitiveââ¬âstatement, "E-Motion."
Gia Margaret is always singing. Every note of this album sings a warm requiem to her past selves; every layer sings her future self into being. Across the album, she applies the lessons of speechlessnessââ¬âthe quasirational ways we communicate without communicating, the way formless sound can cut to the heart of things like a scalpelââ¬âto her own artistic voice.
UPC: 656605238418
Label: Jagjaguwar
Release Date: 4.24.26
Format: Vinyl
Original: $25.99
-65%$25.99
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Description
Every artist has to discover their voice. Gia Margaret didnââ¬â¢t find herself until she lost hers. With a vocal injury that kept her from singing for years, she developed other musical languages, mastering the grammar of an intricate, homey form of ambient music pioneered by Ernest Hood and perfected by The Books. Now, her physical voice healed and her artistic voice honed, she comes full circle with Singing, her first vocal album since 2018ââ¬â¢s Thereââ¬â¢s Always Glimmer. Led by soft piano lines that fall like breath on glass, the music on Singing evidences the same jewelerââ¬â¢s sensitivity to detail that she developed in her silence.
ââ¬ÅThere was a time when I really didnââ¬â¢t know if I would sing again. So once I healed, there was a lot of internal pressure to come back strong,ââ¬Â Margaret says. ââ¬ÅI didnââ¬â¢t know who I was anymore. So it felt like beginning again, and reconnecting with these very old, old parts of myself.ââ¬Â This feeling of intermixed alienation and rediscovery is palpable across the album. In opener ââ¬ÅEveryone Around Me Dancing,ââ¬Â she watches a party from the wings, aware of how her body keeps her from communal joy while also providing new modes of self-knowledge. Shut out from the scene, she is ââ¬Åcloser to the ground, the planet.ââ¬Â In ââ¬ÅAlive Inside,ââ¬Â sheââ¬â¢s so far away from the source that sheââ¬â¢s praying to whoever might hear (ââ¬Åa god, a friend thatââ¬â¢s gone, a spiritââ¬Â). As her voice rises, it seems to be trapped in a web of distortion; itââ¬â¢s as if in her pursuit, sheââ¬â¢s pushing at the very boundaries of what can be said.
The process of making Singing was one of learning how to trust each of those feelings. The album was partially recorded in London with Frou Frouââ¬â¢s Guy Sigsworth, who helped Margaret unify the spree of ideas she had for ââ¬ÅGood Friend,ââ¬Â an album highlight that includes Gregorian chant by ILÃ⬠and turntable scratches, among many other things. David Bazan and Amy Millan also make appearances, as do Kurt Vile and Sean Carey, while Margaretââ¬â¢s longtime collaborator Doug Saltzman plays on and co-produces much of the record. Deb Talan, previously of The Weepies, lends her voice, piano, and guitar to the album's closingââ¬âand definitiveââ¬âstatement, "E-Motion."
Gia Margaret is always singing. Every note of this album sings a warm requiem to her past selves; every layer sings her future self into being. Across the album, she applies the lessons of speechlessnessââ¬âthe quasirational ways we communicate without communicating, the way formless sound can cut to the heart of things like a scalpelââ¬âto her own artistic voice.
UPC: 656605238418
Label: Jagjaguwar
Release Date: 4.24.26
Format: Vinyl











