Lilo - I Don't Like My Chances On The Outside EP (2023) [Hi-Res]
Artist: Lilo
Title: I Don't Like My Chances On The Outside
Year Of Release: 2023
Label: Dalliance Recordings
Genre: Folk, Indie Folk, Americana
Quality: FLAC (tracks) / 24bit-44.1kHz FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 19:27
Total Size: 119 / 226 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: I Don't Like My Chances On The Outside
Year Of Release: 2023
Label: Dalliance Recordings
Genre: Folk, Indie Folk, Americana
Quality: FLAC (tracks) / 24bit-44.1kHz FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 19:27
Total Size: 119 / 226 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
1. Settled (3:21)
2. I Don't Love You Anymore (3:13)
3. Just A Thought (3:47)
4. Spit Up (4:41)
5. Forever My Friend (4:30)
Folk duo and lifelong pals lilo (London based Christie Gardner and Helen Dixon who met at school in Winchester aged 11) have announced a new EP - big yes!! I Don't Like My Chances On The Outside arrives via Dalliance on April 14th, and features recent singles Settled and Just A Thought, as well as brand new track I Don't Love You Anymore. Very much enjoying these tracks and this news!
Speaking about the new track, the duo share: "I Don't Love You Anymore is about telling someone who loves you very much that you want to break up with them. It opens with the clocks changing over on New Year's Eve, as I realised that I knew how I felt, but didn't want to admit it, even to myself. The song moves through the horrible moment that you say the thing you never thought you would, and into the feeling of relief, as you get it out of your system and wriggle free from your secret.
Despite the song being quite liberating in a way, it lingers on how you've made the other person feel, and the guilt that sticks to you long afterwards. When we all went through simultaneous break ups last Summer, we would take it in turns to cry to this song in rehearsals. It's a lilo right of passage."
Speaking about the new track, the duo share: "I Don't Love You Anymore is about telling someone who loves you very much that you want to break up with them. It opens with the clocks changing over on New Year's Eve, as I realised that I knew how I felt, but didn't want to admit it, even to myself. The song moves through the horrible moment that you say the thing you never thought you would, and into the feeling of relief, as you get it out of your system and wriggle free from your secret.
Despite the song being quite liberating in a way, it lingers on how you've made the other person feel, and the guilt that sticks to you long afterwards. When we all went through simultaneous break ups last Summer, we would take it in turns to cry to this song in rehearsals. It's a lilo right of passage."