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Wed September 28, 2022

Lykke Li

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Lykke Li will release EYEYE (pronounced EYE) on May 20, an immersive audiovisual album. Lykke's most intimate project to date, EYEYE reunites her with longtime collaborator Björn Yttling, their first time working together since 2014's acclaimed I NEVER LEARN. Recorded from her bedroom in Los Angeles and mixed by Shawn Everett, EYEYE is Lykke's attempt to compress a lifetime of romantic obsession and female fantasy into a hyper sensory landscape. The album is accompanied by seven visual loops: together, the music and visuals reveal a grander narrative, a story about the eternally returning cycles of love, addiction, relapse and obsession (the album's title and running time are palindromic). EYEYE is not a return to form. It is Lykke's final confrontation with the form that has defined her career. It's a breakup with the breakup album, and the singer's magnum opus.

~~~~~~~~~

Sweden's Lykke Li can't stay still. Her life and her career are relentlessly pulled forward by an impatient desire to see what's just around the corner, her music full of ideas about moving on and breaking free. Just eighteen months ago, she was complaining to her mentor, Bjorn "of Peter and John fame" Yttling, that everything had gone wrong because she was twenty and still hadn't released an album. Now twenty-two, she's finding that things are on track: With the release of her debut album in Sweden through her own label, LL Recordings, in January of this year, she's been surprised and maybe a little embarrassed to find that the world is falling at her feet. She's just the kind of person people can't help falling in love with. The album, entitled Youth Novels, is now scheduled for a well-deserved US release on August 19th via her own label, LL Recordings.

Recorded with Bjorn over the last 10 months, Youth Novels weaves its way through 14 perfectly-realized chapters. You'll hear harpsichords, flutes, and theremins throughout the album but you'll also hear Lykke Li's magnificently brittle, candy coated vocals. The record is like a well-thumbed paperback which falls open again and again on the same pages: love, loneliness, frustration and obsession - the chronicles of LL's life so far, told with unusual honesty. It includes recent hit "Little Bit" (released on an EP this May), continues with the punchy throb of "I'm Good I'm Gone," whose video is already making waves around the internet, and brilliant songs like reluctant breakup anthem "Breaking It Up," "Let It Fall" and "Hanging High." Throughout, there's a sense of momentum and a pursuit of some unobtainable goal. "I don't think I'll ever be satisfied and calm," Lykke Li admits. "Even now I wonder how I'm going to live a whole lifetime, feeling how I do now..."

If you're wondering where Lykke Li (first name Lykke Li, last name Zachrisson)'s fidgety, keep-on-moving attitude began, let's rewind twenty-two years to the very beginning of her nomadic life. We're in northern Europe, and Chernobylised clouds have chosen to dump their radioactive rain down on Stockholm. A new sense of environmental consciousness grips the country and LL's parents - her mother a photographer, her father a musician - move from the city to the country and then, selling everything they own, to Portugal, where they buy land and build a house in a small village in the mountains. As the years tick by, the family moves to Lisbon, then back to Sweden. Every year, the family escapes Sweden's gloomy winters to India, then return in the summer. At nineteen, she ended up in New York City for a few months, performing at open mic nights and pretending to be a Swedish superstar in order to get gigs. By twenty, she was back in Sweden, working with the incredible Bjorn Yttling, on her first collection of songs. Indeed, her passport may be Swedish, but life has shown that Lykke Li is from a little bit of everywhere, with a perfect balance of global city and suburb that pours from the organic, digital feel of her songs.

In October 2007, Lykke Li returned to New York to finish recording Youth Novels - the result being one of the most perfect pop albums you'll hear all year. Just as her music sometimes seems to have arrived from another planet, Lykke Li is not quite like anyone you've met before. And if the response to Youth Novels around the world thus far has been any indication, she's an artist with whom you'll be spending a lot of time this year and beyond...
Lykke Li will release EYEYE (pronounced EYE) on May 20, an immersive audiovisual album. Lykke's most intimate project to date, EYEYE reunites her with longtime collaborator Björn Yttling, their first time working together since 2014's acclaimed I NEVER LEARN. Recorded from her bedroom in Los Angeles and mixed by Shawn Everett, EYEYE is Lykke's attempt to compress a lifetime of romantic obsession and female fantasy into a hyper sensory landscape. The album is accompanied by seven visual loops: together, the music and visuals reveal a grander narrative, a story about the eternally returning cycles of love, addiction, relapse and obsession (the album's title and running time are palindromic). EYEYE is not a return to form. It is Lykke's final confrontation with the form that has defined her career. It's a breakup with the breakup album, and the singer's magnum opus.

~~~~~~~~~

Sweden's Lykke Li can't stay still. Her life and her career are relentlessly pulled forward by an impatient desire to see what's just around the corner, her music full of ideas about moving on and breaking free. Just eighteen months ago, she was complaining to her mentor, Bjorn "of Peter and John fame" Yttling, that everything had gone wrong because she was twenty and still hadn't released an album. Now twenty-two, she's finding that things are on track: With the release of her debut album in Sweden through her own label, LL Recordings, in January of this year, she's been surprised and maybe a little embarrassed to find that the world is falling at her feet. She's just the kind of person people can't help falling in love with. The album, entitled Youth Novels, is now scheduled for a well-deserved US release on August 19th via her own label, LL Recordings.

Recorded with Bjorn over the last 10 months, Youth Novels weaves its way through 14 perfectly-realized chapters. You'll hear harpsichords, flutes, and theremins throughout the album but you'll also hear Lykke Li's magnificently brittle, candy coated vocals. The record is like a well-thumbed paperback which falls open again and again on the same pages: love, loneliness, frustration and obsession - the chronicles of LL's life so far, told with unusual honesty. It includes recent hit "Little Bit" (released on an EP this May), continues with the punchy throb of "I'm Good I'm Gone," whose video is already making waves around the internet, and brilliant songs like reluctant breakup anthem "Breaking It Up," "Let It Fall" and "Hanging High." Throughout, there's a sense of momentum and a pursuit of some unobtainable goal. "I don't think I'll ever be satisfied and calm," Lykke Li admits. "Even now I wonder how I'm going to live a whole lifetime, feeling how I do now..."

If you're wondering where Lykke Li (first name Lykke Li, last name Zachrisson)'s fidgety, keep-on-moving attitude began, let's rewind twenty-two years to the very beginning of her nomadic life. We're in northern Europe, and Chernobylised clouds have chosen to dump their radioactive rain down on Stockholm. A new sense of environmental consciousness grips the country and LL's parents - her mother a photographer, her father a musician - move from the city to the country and then, selling everything they own, to Portugal, where they buy land and build a house in a small village in the mountains. As the years tick by, the family moves to Lisbon, then back to Sweden. Every year, the family escapes Sweden's gloomy winters to India, then return in the summer. At nineteen, she ended up in New York City for a few months, performing at open mic nights and pretending to be a Swedish superstar in order to get gigs. By twenty, she was back in Sweden, working with the incredible Bjorn Yttling, on her first collection of songs. Indeed, her passport may be Swedish, but life has shown that Lykke Li is from a little bit of everywhere, with a perfect balance of global city and suburb that pours from the organic, digital feel of her songs.

In October 2007, Lykke Li returned to New York to finish recording Youth Novels - the result being one of the most perfect pop albums you'll hear all year. Just as her music sometimes seems to have arrived from another planet, Lykke Li is not quite like anyone you've met before. And if the response to Youth Novels around the world thus far has been any indication, she's an artist with whom you'll be spending a lot of time this year and beyond...
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The Warfield 29 Upcoming Events
982 Market Street, San Francisco, CA 94102

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