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Alternative 26 February, 2019

Julia Jacklin's 'Crushing' Out Today!

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New York, NY (Top40 Charts) Julia Jacklin has critics around the world raving about her new album Crushing which is out today on Polyvinyl Records/Universal Music. The album features the already released tracks "Body", "Head Alone " and "Pressure To Party" and Jacklin is being hailed as one of the most important songwriters to emerge in 2019. Her songs weave through narratives telling stories from her past, sometimes with a surprise ending or simply a line that packs such punch you can't help but get emotional. This is an album that demands attention.

Album of the Week & Month
Dork Magazine (UK)
Triple R (AUS)
Vinyl Me Plas (US)
Spex - Album of the Week (Germany)
AU Review (AUS)
AU Review (AUS)
2SER (AUS)
The Skinny (UK)
Loud & Quiet (UK)

5/5 Reviews
Bust Magazine (US) 5/5
The Telegraph (UK) - 5/5
Independent UK- 5/5
Soundblab (US) 5/5

Other Rave Reviews
The Music (AUS) - 4.5/5
Mojo (UK) - 4/5
Uncut (UK) - 4/5
DIY (UK) - 4/5
Exclaim! (CA) - 8/10
NME (UK) - 4/5
Consequence of Sound (US) - 7.5/10
The Mail (UK) - 4/5
Q Magazine (UK) - 4/5

The Australian singer-songwriter has a knack for packing an emotional punch with her deceptively fragile sound... an exciting return for the musician, and positions our eyes on the road to Jacklin's next release." - NPR

""Head Alone" sounds at first like placid folk-rock, with two strummed guitar chords behind Australian songwriter Julia Jacklin's reedy voice. But that's resolve, not complacency; she's fuming, and the reason soon emerges: "I don't want to be touched all the time," she sings. By the end of the song, she's got a rallying cry: "Say it till he understands/ You can love somebody without using your hands."" - New York Times

"["Body"] A maudlin song about your shitty boyfriend being arrested on a plane for smoking in the toilets. What's not to love?" - The FADER

"Focus on the emotions and scenes she conjures with her carefully chosen words and you start to appreciate Crushing for what it is: Nothing less than an awakening." - THERINGER

"Aussie artist Julia Jacklin's new album Crushing explores all facets of the word. "Head Alone" is a pointed song; with the gripping socio-political lyric "I don't want to be touched all the time/I raised my body up to be mine." - KCRW

Canadian Tour Dates:
04/27 - Montreal, QC @ Bar Le Ritz PDB #
04/28 - Toronto, ON @ Horseshoe Tavern #
05/17 - Vancouver, BC @ Fox Cabaret #
# w/ Black Belt Eagle Scout

The second full-length album from Australian singer/songwriter Julia Jacklin, Crushing embodies every possible meaning of its title word. It's an album formed from sheer intensity of feeling, an in-the-moment narrative of heartbreak and infatuation. And with her storytelling centered on bodies and crossed boundaries and smothering closeness, Crushing reveals how our physical experience of the world shapes and sometimes distorts our inner lives.
"This album came from spending two years touring and being in a relationship, and feeling like I never had any space of my own," says the Melbourne-based artist. "For a long time I felt like my head was full of fear and my body was just this functional thing that carried me from point A to B, and writing these songs was like rejoining the two."

The follow-up to her 2016 debut Don't Let the Kids Win, Crushing finds Jacklin continually acknowledging what's expected of her, then gracefully rejecting those expectations. As a result, the album invites self-examination and a possible shift in the listener's way of getting around the world—an effect that has everything to do with Jacklin's openness about her own experience.
"I used to be so worried about seeming demanding that I'd put up with anything, which I think is common—you want to be chill and cool, but it ends up taking so much of your emotional energy," says Jacklin. "Now I've gotten used to calling out things I'm not okay with, instead of just burying my feelings to make it easier on everyone. I've realized that in order to keep the peace, you have to speak up for yourself and say what you really want."

Produced by Burke Reid (Courtney Barnett, The Drones) and recorded at The Grove Studios (a bushland hideaway built by INXS' Garry Gary Beers), Crushing sets Jacklin's understated defiance against a raw yet luminous sonic backdrop. "In all the songs, you can hear every sound from every instrument; you can hear my throat and hear me breathing," she says. "It was really important to me that you can hear everything for the whole record, without any studio tricks getting in the way."

On the album-opening lead single "Body," Jacklin proves the power of that approach, turning out a mesmerizing vocal performance even as she slips into the slightest murmur. A starkly composed portrait of a breakup, the song bears an often-bracing intimacy, a sense that you're right in the room with Jacklin as she lays her heart out. And as "Body" wanders and drifts, Jacklin establishes Crushing as an album that exists entirely on its own time, a work that's willfully unhurried.

From there, Crushing shifts into the slow-building urgency of "Head Alone," a pointed and electrifying anthem of refusal (sample lyric: "I don't want to be touched all the time/I raised my body up to be mine"). "As a woman, in my case as a touring musician, the way you're touched is different from your male bandmates—by strangers and by those close to you," notes Jacklin. On the full-tilt, harmony-spiked "Pressure to Party," she pushes toward another form of emotional freedom. "When you come out of a relationship, there's so much pressure to act a certain way," says Jacklin. "First it's like, 'Oh, you've gotta take some time for yourself'…but then if you take too much time it's, 'You've gotta get back out there!' That song is just my three-minute scream, saying I'm going to do what I need to do, when I need to do it." Crushing also shows Jacklin's autonomy on songs like "Convention," an eye-rolling dismissal of unsolicited advice, presented in elegantly sardonic lyrics ("I can tell you won't sleep well, if you don't teach me how to do it right").

Elsewhere on Crushing, Jacklin brings her exacting reflection to songs on loss. With its transportive harmonies and slow-burning guitar solo, "Don't Know How to Keep Loving You" ponders the heartache in fading affection ("I want your mother to stay friends with mine/I want this feeling to pass in time"). Meanwhile, on "Turn Me Down"—an idiosyncratically arranged track embedded with hypnotic guitar tones—Jacklin gives an exquisitely painful glimpse at unrequited devotion ("He took my hand, said I see a bright future/I'm just not sure that you're in it"). "That song destroyed me in the studio," says Jacklin of "Turn Me Down," whose middle section contains a particularly devastating vocal performance. "I remember lying on the floor in a total state between what felt like endless takes, and if you listen it kind of sounds like I'm losing my mind." And on "When the Family Flies In," Jacklin shares her first ever piano-driven piece, a beautifully muted elegy for the same friend to whom she dedicated Don't Let the Kids Win. "There are really no words to do justice to what it feels like to lose a friend," says Jacklin. "It felt a bit cheap to even try to write a song about it, but this one came out on tour and it finally felt okay to record.

Despite its complexity, Crushing unfolds with an ease that echoes Jacklin's newfound self-reliance as an artist. Originally from the Blue Mountains, she grew up on her parents' Billy Bragg and Doris Day records and sang in musicals as a child, then started writing her own songs in her early 20s. "With the first album I was so nervous and didn't quite see myself as a musician yet, but after touring for two years, I've come to feel like I deserve to be in that space," she says.

Throughout Crushing, that sense of confidence manifests in one of the most essential elements of the album: the captivating strength of Jacklin's lyrics. Not only proof of her ingenuity and artistic generosity, Jacklin's uncompromising specificity and infinitely unpredictable turns of phrase ultimately spring from a certain self-possession in the songwriting process.
"As I was making this album there was sort of a slow loosening of pressure on myself," Jacklin says. "There've been some big life changes for me over the last few years, and I just found it too tiring to try to cover things up with a lot of metaphors and word trickery. I just wanted to lay it all out there and trust that, especially at such a tense moment in time, other people might want to hear a little vulnerability."






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