New York, NY (Top40 Charts) Erika
Spring released her solo debut EP in 2012 to critical acclaim, and today - six years later - she announces her breathtaking sophomore EP entitled Scars, out October 5 on Cascine. Recent years have seen
Erika reunite with her fellow bandmates from synth-pop trio Au Revoir
Simone to record a new album and appear on
David Lynch's Twin Peaks, and join forces with
Jenny Lewis and Tennessee
Thomas under the name Nice As Fuck, releasing an album together and touring North America. Now
Erika returns with her trademark brand of introspective pop for Scars, an EP that was co-written with music partner Homer Steinweiss (drummer for The Dap-Kings, Mark Ronson, Amy Winehouse, producer for Monika, Paul Spring,
Diane Birch, Holy Hive) and chronicles Erika's challenging journey towards motherhood. See below for artwork and tracklisting, and pre-order Scars HERE.
As the first single and EP title track out today suggests, there's something bittersweet at play across Scars; hardship might have passed, but the vestiges remain. "We wrote the track 'Scars' around the time that I had an early miscarriage. The song came together so naturally at the piano, and the words just spilled out,"
Erika explains. "The lyrics address that experience of loss, but I don't think I realized it at the time. There was just a general intensity to life which hasn't slowed down since having my son in November of 2016 - so trying to keep moving while hanging on to some hopefulness is part of the spirit of this song, too."
Erika's musical journey began as an art-school multimedia project, leading her to a love of the keyboard that would sustain and inform her career. That passion was the foundation of Au Revoir Simone, which she helped form in 2003. Based in New York,
Erika lived a complete musical life within the world of Au Revoir Simone, with a tenure that spanned four albums over the course of a decade. In 2012,
Erika took the opportunity to explore her own musical output, releasing a self-titled EP. Produced by friend
Jorge Elbrecht, the sun-bleached songs of her solo debut were received warmly by critics and fans - Pitchfork, for one, wrote that the EP "dances gracefully on the edges of past and present, of waking life and dreams."
The confessional compositions on Scars are meticulously constructed and wrapped in a serene haze, creating a dreamlike atmosphere that's warm, yet wistful.
Erika explains it best when she says, "These songs are about listening with all the senses - skin brushing someone else's skin, listening with memory, seeing the lenses we see through, slipping into something, embracing the invisible and unseen forces at play."