JUNE JONES Releases her new album Leafcutter Announces album launch dates

by the partae
Photo credit: Jess Brohier PRAISE FOR JUNE JONES “With Leafcutter she bends synth-pop convention in a fearlessly honest set that explores her experiences as a “deeply emotional” trans woman." - UNCUT "Unnerving and beautiful, it’s a strikingly rendered portrait of disaffection." - THE FADER "Fans of John Grant, Kate Bush and Björk will find a lot to love here — Leafcutter is by very definition art pop, but it never ventures out of the realm of accessibility." - Beat “Leafcutter is a reminder that there is strength in vulnerability and something truly powerful about a well-written song.” - STACK “June Jones' voice is one that envelops you and never lets you go. The emotion she lacquers every word with becomes your emotion; her world becomes your own.” - MTV A prolific artist and singular voice in the world of Australian music, June Jones releases her sophomore album Leafcutter today on Emotion Punk Records in collaboration with Remote Control Records. Despite this being Jones’ first self-produced record, Leafcutter feels in many ways like a logical sequel to her previous releases, which include two albums with Two Steps on the Water, the self-proclaimed “emotion punk” band she fronted from 2014 to 2018. Like her past albums, Leafcutter is a collection of songs exploring different aspects of her experience as “a deeply emotional trans woman, a lesbian with ADHD.” Her signature vocals – dynamic in their ability to move between syrupy cool and impassioned exclamation – are present as ever at the forefront of this record. To celebrate Leafcutter's release, Jones has announced album launches in Sydney & Castlemaine, plus an additional Melbourne show, on top of her two sold-out shows at Howler for the Brunswick Music Festival. Details below.   Lyrically, the songs have a confessional intimacy that Jones has become known for. On her latest single, 'Home', she uses the five senses to describe her relationship to her body, being loved, and learning to love herself. The verses are both poetic and analytic – “The sound of my voice in your ear / I wonder who it is you hear / And if you can discern the beating of my wings / The nutrients inside a tear” – culminating in a resplendent chorus in which she sings “But this is now / And this is home / And home is all I ever wanted” in a voice that is unmistakably hers.   Throughout 'Remember', the second track on the album, Jones uses her voice as an instrument, singing deep dyadic chords reminiscent of a Gregorian chant, panned between left and right ears. This millennium-old vocal style is counterbalanced with synths that reference both Madchester rave and hair metal, as well as viola, saxophone, intricate drum patterns, and a casually cool bass line. All these elements work together to create a sound that is at once familiar and unlike anything else that has come before. It is this atemporal collaging of old and new styles that defines Jones’s self-taught approach to production on Leafcutter. As a producer, Jones reminds us that everything new is a rearranging and reimagining of traditions.   “I made the whole album on a tiny refurbished Lenovo Thinkpad that I bought off a guy at a McDonalds. 18 months and over 1000 hours of work later, the album is finally finished. As someone diagnosed with ADHD as an adult, I have been almost entirely self-taught as a musician, whether it’s singing, writing songs, learning an instrument, or producing my own music, I just haven’t been able to sit still long enough to get through a lesson. But there have definitely been moments along the way where I have learned a lot from people, like sitting in the studio with Geoffrey O’Connor throughout the process of making Diana, or getting feedback on mixes from my dear friend and superproducer Geryon. Sometimes I wish I could approach learning in a more structured and systematic way, but I get overwhelmed by the infinite possibilities of music, so I’ve always felt more comfortable intuiting my way through things.”   Leafcutter manages to feel both intuitive and unpredictable in a way that calls to mind a classic Björk or Kate Bush album, finding a tentative home in the nebulous definition of art-pop. From above it is a pop record, but from within it resembles a labyrinth overflowing with intricate details that reveal themselves with each listen. Jones’s intuition informs both the album’s pop sensibility and experimentation. One thing that she delivers yet again is a record bursting with songs that get stuck in your head. Leafcutter, insectoid in name, is home to no shortage of earworms.   “One of my favourite albums of all time is Carly Rae Jepsen’s Emotion. For me, it’s a perfect pop album, with bangers from start to finish. In a funny way, I aspire to achieve that kind of consistency with every album I make. I feel like I am probably more prone to boredom than most, and it’s a state that I find almost painful. If there’s one thing I want to avoid as an artist, it’s being boring.” And boring this album is not. Every song feels like its own little world which Jones invites us into, where we are asked to sit and feel with her for a few minutes before moving next door to another one, with similarities and differences, made up of things both familiar and strange. On Leafcutter, Jones pulls off the unlikely feat of finding harmony in that which, according to our own intuitions, should be dissonant. In the second last line of the opening track, 'Jenny (Breathe)', she sings “There are as many worlds as minds here to perceive them”, and so too is the case with the quantum art pop of Leafcutter. Buy / Listen June Jones - Leafcutter: junejones.lnk.to/leafcutter UPCOMING SHOWS Instore Performance Saturday 27 February - 3PM Rocksteady Records, Melb Free Entry, Limited Capacity, All Ages (postponed from Friday 19th February) Leafcutter Album Launches Saturday 13 March Howler, Melb - Brunswick Music Festival w/ Geryon & Kalyani SOLD OUT   Friday 23 April - 8PM The Thornbury Theatre, Melbourne w/ Elle Shimada & Katie Dey Tickets Sunday 25 April – 2:30PM The Bridge Hotel, Castlemaine Free Entry Saturday 8 May – 9PM Vic on the Park, Sydney w/ Marcus Whale Free Entry June Jones Youtube | Facebook | Instagram | Bandcamp
Photo credit: Jess Brohier

PRAISE FOR JUNE JONES

“With Leafcutter she bends synth-pop convention in a fearlessly honest set that explores her experiences as a “deeply emotional” trans woman.” – UNCUT

“Unnerving and beautiful, it’s a strikingly rendered portrait of disaffection.” – THE FADER

“Fans of John Grant, Kate Bush and Björk will find a lot to love here — Leafcutter is by very definition art pop, but it never ventures out of the realm of accessibility.” – Beat

“Leafcutter is a reminder that there is strength in vulnerability and something truly powerful about a well-written song.” – STACK

“June Jones’ voice is one that envelops you and never lets you go. The emotion she lacquers every word with becomes your emotion; her world becomes your own.” – MTV

A prolific artist and singular voice in the world of Australian music, June Jones releases her sophomore album Leafcutter today on Emotion Punk Records in collaboration with Remote Control Records. Despite this being Jones’ first self-produced record, Leafcutter feels in many ways like a logical sequel to her previous releases, which include two albums with Two Steps on the Water, the self-proclaimed “emotion punk” band she fronted from 2014 to 2018. Like her past albums, Leafcutter is a collection of songs exploring different aspects of her experience as “a deeply emotional trans woman, a lesbian with ADHD.” Her signature vocals – dynamic in their ability to move between syrupy cool and impassioned exclamation – are present as ever at the forefront of this record.

To celebrate Leafcutter‘s release, Jones has announced album launches in Sydney & Castlemaine, plus an additional Melbourne show, on top of her two sold-out shows at Howler for the Brunswick Music Festival. Details below.

Lyrically, the songs have a confessional intimacy that Jones has become known for. On her latest single, ‘Home’, she uses the five senses to describe her relationship to her body, being loved, and learning to love herself. The verses are both poetic and analytic – “The sound of my voice in your ear / I wonder who it is you hear / And if you can discern the beating of my wings / The nutrients inside a tear” – culminating in a resplendent chorus in which she sings “But this is now / And this is home / And home is all I ever wanted” in a voice that is unmistakably hers.

Throughout ‘Remember‘, the second track on the album, Jones uses her voice as an instrument, singing deep dyadic chords reminiscent of a Gregorian chant, panned between left and right ears. This millennium-old vocal style is counterbalanced with synths that reference both Madchester rave and hair metal, as well as viola, saxophone, intricate drum patterns, and a casually cool bass line. All these elements work together to create a sound that is at once familiar and unlike anything else that has come before. It is this atemporal collaging of old and new styles that defines Jones’s self-taught approach to production on Leafcutter. As a producer, Jones reminds us that everything new is a rearranging and reimagining of traditions.

“I made the whole album on a tiny refurbished Lenovo Thinkpad that I bought off a guy at a McDonalds. 18 months and over 1000 hours of work later, the album is finally finished. As someone diagnosed with ADHD as an adult, I have been almost entirely self-taught as a musician, whether it’s singing, writing songs, learning an instrument, or producing my own music, I just haven’t been able to sit still long enough to get through a lesson. But there have definitely been moments along the way where I have learned a lot from people, like sitting in the studio with Geoffrey O’Connor throughout the process of making Diana, or getting feedback on mixes from my dear friend and superproducer Geryon. Sometimes I wish I could approach learning in a more structured and systematic way, but I get overwhelmed by the infinite possibilities of music, so I’ve always felt more comfortable intuiting my way through things.”

Leafcutter manages to feel both intuitive and unpredictable in a way that calls to mind a classic Björk or Kate Bush album, finding a tentative home in the nebulous definition of art-pop. From above it is a pop record, but from within it resembles a labyrinth overflowing with intricate details that reveal themselves with each listen. Jones’s intuition informs both the album’s pop sensibility and experimentation. One thing that she delivers yet again is a record bursting with songs that get stuck in your head. Leafcutter, insectoid in name, is home to no shortage of earworms.

“One of my favourite albums of all time is Carly Rae Jepsen’s Emotion. For me, it’s a perfect pop album, with bangers from start to finish. In a funny way, I aspire to achieve that kind of consistency with every album I make. I feel like I am probably more prone to boredom than most, and it’s a state that I find almost painful. If there’s one thing I want to avoid as an artist, it’s being boring.”

And boring this album is not. Every song feels like its own little world which Jones invites us into, where we are asked to sit and feel with her for a few minutes before moving next door to another one, with similarities and differences, made up of things both familiar and strange. On LeafcutterJones pulls off the unlikely feat of finding harmony in that which, according to our own intuitions, should be dissonant. In the second last line of the opening track, ‘Jenny (Breathe)’, she sings “There are as many worlds as minds here to perceive them”, and so too is the case with the quantum art pop of Leafcutter.

Buy / Listen June Jones – Leafcutterjunejones.lnk.to/leafcutter

UPCOMING SHOWS

Instore Performance
Saturday 27 February – 3PM
Rocksteady Records, Melb
Free Entry, Limited Capacity, All Ages
(postponed from Friday 19th February)

Leafcutter Album Launches
Saturday 13 March
Howler, Melb – Brunswick Music Festival
w/ Geryon & Kalyani
SOLD OUT

Friday 23 April – 8PM
The Thornbury Theatre, Melbourne
w/ Elle Shimada & Katie Dey
Tickets

Sunday 25 April – 2:30PM
The Bridge Hotel, Castlemaine
Free Entry

Saturday 8 May – 9PM
Vic on the Park, Sydney
w/ Marcus Whale
Free Entry

June Jones
Youtube | Facebook | Instagram | Bandcamp

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