Nina taking Dylan's "I Shall Be Released" and turning a folk tune into something churchy and aching. That voice cracks the whole thing wide open. Perfect way to start low.
songs for low light and late hours.
Nina taking Dylan's "I Shall Be Released" and turning a folk tune into something churchy and aching. That voice cracks the whole thing wide open. Perfect way to start low.
Stripped all the way down — just that gravelly folk voice and a guitar, no production to hide behind. Feels like it's being sung across a quiet room straight at you.
Hiatt's a songwriter's songwriter, and "Cry Love" is grown-up heartbreak — weathered, plainspoken, that warm 90s roots-rock glow. Sneaky-devastating if you actually listen to the words.
Off Wrecking Ball, with Daniel Lanois producing — so it's Emmylou drenched in that gorgeous atmospheric reverb, her voice just floating over the haze. Country gone cinematic.
French synth-pop at its most narcotic. Tellier half-whispers over this slow, widescreen swell — love and violence, all velvet. Peak late-night European melancholy.
Phil Elverum in a barn, chasing the sound of the actual universe on a 4-track. Quiet, then huge, then quiet again. Nobody does hushed-into-overwhelming like him — this is Mount Eerie cosmic folk.
A rehearsal take, so it's raw and roomy — HTRK's icy, narcotic post-punk with all the edges left on. Jonnine's deadpan just drifting over the murk. The unpolish is the point.
The other side of Kool & The Gang — before all the party anthems, they cut this gorgeous instrumental melancholy. Wintry Rhodes, a lonely flute, pure blue mood. A proper deep cut.
The deep-voiced Aussie troubadour (Cruel Sea, Beasts of Bourbon) in quiet mode. Slow-burning, boozy, and very late. The one track here that lives only on Spotify — everywhere else came up empty.
Early Tamara Lindeman, way before the bigger records — spare fingerpicked folk, just voice and guitar and a seriously good pen. Herbal, delicate, over before you're ready.
Ella Williams — hushed then swelling indie, all tension and tenderness. It's the title track, and her voice can go from a whisper to a flood inside a single line.
Veirs writes these little science-y, watery folk songs like nobody else. Off Year of Meteors — twinkling, weightless, and quietly strange.
From Seven Swans — just banjo and that fragile Sufjan whisper, a love song aimed somewhere between a person and God. Almost too tender to sit still through.
A real deep cut off his debut A Sun Came — early, weird, homemade Sufjan, years before the orchestras and the concept albums. Charming and a little lost.
BANKS in her most vulnerable register — moody alt-R&B, all breath and ache over minimal production. The one modern-pop moment here, and it fits the low light.
The Godspeed offshoot at their most fragile — strings, piano, no words, just a slow devastating lullaby. Named exactly right: it feels like something quietly watching over you in the dark.
Their take on the Mazzy Star classic, rebuilt in Sega Bodega's warped, glassy production with Eartheater's ghost-voice draped over it. Familiar song, uncanny new skin.
Spoken-word-over-production (Francis Hornsby Clark musing, Vegyn on the beats). Deadpan and funny-sad, drifting across gorgeous ambient electronics. Weird and genuinely lovely.
Ambient at its most blurred and human — Brian Leeds loops these warm, decaying tape-hiss washes until they start to feel like memory. Music for 3am, basically.
A long, quiet, piano-led ache from the All Delighted People EP. It builds so slowly you don't notice you've gone under.
Liz Harris drowning a folk song in tape hiss and reverb until it's barely there — you're never quite sure if you're awake. Off Dragging a Dead Deer Up a Hill, and honestly the platonic ideal of this whole playlist.
The Big Thief singer alone in a cabin with one mic — you can hear the room, the strings, everything. "I don't wanna talk about anything." Guts you very quietly.
Maybe the most intimate three minutes ever put to tape — just Russell, his cello, and a voice that sounds like it's confessing something. "I'm a little lost without you." Nobody who hears it ever quite gets over it.
Widescreen nocturnal folk — fingerpicked guitar, a low synth glow, and Byrne's warm voice describing infinite freedom. From Not Even Happiness. Feels like driving somewhere at night with no destination.
Recorded alone in Canada on a synth and a drum machine, ignored for decades, then rediscovered as a quiet masterpiece. "Ever New" is pure transcendence — weightless, hopeful, unlike anything else here. The perfect note to end on.