Blood Lemon has released their new video for the track titled ‘High Tide’ from their upcoming EP ‘Petite Deaths’ dropping on January 17th. To say that it’s about time I heard something from the old school new cool genre I made up in my head a long time ago just to classify something fresh and new while retaining that classic sound I fell in love with during my youth would be the colossal understatement of the century. But, here it is.

Blood Lemon i steeped in that classic sound because it has elements that invented it. Bassist Melanie Radford is in Built To Spill, for chrissakes. Having said that, keep in mind that Blood Lemon is entirely it’s own thing. An omnipotent presence in the state of the new indie. About to lay a soul bomb on January 17th.

‘High Tide’ is that feeling of joy wrapped inside something you found on the curb of a dirty road, discarded by someone and meant for you, because it feels built for you. It’s a song that stays with you long after that first listen and grows and grows and grows. A slacker anthem for the underappreciated and unindighted.

About ‘Petite Deaths’

Recorded at the storied Rancho De La Luna studio in Joshua Tree with esteemed producer Dave Catching (Desert Sessions, Queens of the Stone Age, earthlings?), this 5 song collection masterfully echoes the vastness of the desert it was shaped in. But beyond the desert’s influence, Petite Deaths also tells a story of the intimate journey of creation, both musical and personal: the band’s drummer/percussionist Lindsey Lloyd learned she would be expecting the birth of her first daughter, Zenith, once recording was wrapped.

While the songs on Petite Deaths are, no doubt, less overtly political than the band’s eponymous debut LP, they are no less provocative. The EP’s title is a reference to the French phrase petite mort or “small death,” used as a euphemism for the grand sensation that arrives post-orgasm (much like Tori Amos’ landmark Little Earthquakes). Bassist (and current Built to Spill member) Melanie Radford explains, “When we were deciding on the title of this 5-song EP, we realized each of these songs felt like flashes of life and death. Each of them are ‘epic’ in their own way: small bursts of either pleasure or despair, tied together by a large musical landscape.”

Blood Lemon’s debut received praise from outlets like NPR Music, A.V. Club, SPIN and beyond, garnering comparisons to other beloved female-fronted influences like Sleater-Kinney and The Breeders. Following appearances at Treefort Music Fest, as well as dates supporting avant-garage heavy hitters The Shivas and viral goth-punks Vision Video, the band began working on music with widened emotional registers. Petite Deaths is the result of that period, and a testament to how these three women continue to invent (and reinvent) themselves through a shared love of song and embracing change with resourcefulness.

‘Petite Deaths’ Tracklist & Info

'Petite Deaths' cover.
‘Petite Deaths’ cover.
  1. High Tide
  2. Her Shadow
  3. Mountain’r Lower (Jessica Pratt cover)
  4. Perfect Too
  5. Mudlark

All songs written & performed by Blood Lemon, except “Mountain’r Lower” written by Jessica Pratt
Produced & engineered by Jonathan Russo and Dave Catching at Rancho de la Luna (Joshua Tree, CA)
Mixing by Paul Malinowski at Massive Sound
Mastering by Greg Obis at Chicago Mastering Service

Cover artwork by Lisa Simpson
Design by James WAR Lloyd

About Blood Lemon

The desert often represents scarcity, a place where few signs of life can be found. For the women in Blood Lemon, however, trading their homebase in the high desert of Boise, Idaho for the low desert in Joshua Tree, California would prove to be the right choice to give the five songs found on Petite Deaths their final form.

“Small bursts of either pleasure or despair,” says bassist and vocalist Melanie Radford of the collection comprising Blood Lemon’s sophomore release. “I think what came out was something eclectic and mystic,” she added. Using the seemingly scant resources of the Mojave, Radford, guitarist and vocalist Lisa Simpson, and drummer/percussionist Lindsey Lloyd, culled together their strongest set of songs to date.

Working alongside esteemed fuzz lord Dave Catching (Desert Sessions, Queens of the Stone Age, earthlings?) at the storied Rancho De La Luna studio, the band treated the sessions as a retreat rather than a routine visit to a recording studio. To make the most of the time away from Boise, the band stayed in an adjacent bungalow on the property, seizing an opportunity to “briefly get away from distractions in our immediate lives,” says Radford.

Blood Lemon, a mainstay of the Boise scene despite Radford’s recent move to nearby Seattle, received plenty of praise for their eponymous debut released in the throes of the pandemic. NPR Music, A.V. Club, SPIN, and other outlets of repute lauded their debut that garnered comparisons to other beloved female-fronted influences like Sleater-Kinney and The Breeders. Following celebrated appearances at Treefort Music Fest in their hometown as well as dates supporting avant-garage heavy hitters The Shivas and viral goth-punks Vision Video, the band crafted a collection of songs with widened emotional registers when Radford was on break from serving as the current bassist of indie stalwarts Built To Spill.

While the songs on Petite Deaths are, no doubt, less overtly political than the band’s debut LP, they are no less provocative. The record’s opener, “High Tide,” explores Simpson’s fascination with “concepts around sensuality and completion” and “what other languages and cultures called an orgasm.” Echoing the aforementioned Breeders’ penchant for blending distorted guitars with entrancing female vocals, the track provides plenty of overdrive alongside lyrics that speak to our animalistic tendency to seduce and be seduced. Thoroughly couched in metaphor, Simpson’s lyrics might still pass as classroom-appropriate in her new role as a teacher at her daughter’s elementary school in Boise.

Other songs on the collection put Radford’s ethereal vocals and erudite bass playing on full display, often branching out into new territory. For example, “Her Shadow” was “an experiment on how to collaborate differently,” says Radford of using Lloyd’s pre-written lyrics as a basis to develop melodies and chords around. A sludged-out reworking of Jessica Pratt’s “Mountain’r Lower” also gives plenty of room for the band’s psychedelic and more other-worldly influences to shine through. With searing lead guitars and pulsing rhythms, the collection’s first single, “Perfect Too,” offers a scathing critique of contemporary culture’s tendency to sell perfectionism without any promise of moral salvation.

“Mudlark,” another song with Simpson’s voice at the forefront, is equally full of wonder. Inspired by Scottish actor Sam Heughan’s review of Mudlarking, a novel by Lara Maiklem, the song explores the theme of scavengers who meander riverbanks for hidden treasures. An “unabashed” fan of Heughan’s work as an actor and author, Simpson gravitated towards imagery in his review of the novel, and in her words, of “a person being a possession that ends up being tossed away, and hidden beneath the surface of the riverbed.” The result, an expansively melancholic track that crescendos into one of the band’s signature dirges toward the end of its six-plus minutes of runtime, exhibits how the band can hold an audience’s attention with songs longer than those conforming to traditional radio formats.

Beyond the expansiveness of the desert influencing the sonic landscape of Petite Deaths, birth also became a central component of the album’s creative force. Following the recording sessions, Lloyd soon learned that she would be expecting the birth of her first daughter, Zenith. Lloyd’s dedication to the band was underscored when the band performed a show in the winter of 2023 in the last weeks of her pregnancy. Well aware that scheduling any major life decisions while playing in an active band can be difficult, Lloyd notes that “the timing of making the record couldn’t have been better.”

As the final notes fade and captured sounds of coyotes howling in the Mojave fill the silence, the listener is immersed in the stark beauty of the desert and the transformative power of collaboration. Petite Deaths is a testament to how these three women continue to invent – and reinvent – themselves through a shared love of song and embracing change with resourcefulness. The album stands as a powerful statement, echoing with the vastness of the desert and the intimate journey of creation, both musical and personal.

LINKS:
https://www.bloodlemonmusic.com/
https://www.instagram.com/bloodlemonmusic/
https://www.facebook.com/bloodlemonmusic
https://bloodlemon.bandcamp.com/