Wren Hinds - Don't Die In The Bundu (2023)

  • 20 Jul, 15:17
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Artist:
Title: Don't Die In The Bundu
Year Of Release: 2023
Label: Bella Union
Genre: Alternative
Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 00:42:58
Total Size: 100 mb | 203 mb
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. Wren Hinds - A Song
02. Wren Hinds - Wild Eyes
03. Wren Hinds - Father
04. Wren Hinds - Chasing the River
05. Wren Hinds - A Wasted Love
06. Wren Hinds - Restless Child
07. Wren Hinds - Dream State
08. Wren Hinds - The Garden
09. Wren Hinds - Gilded by the Sun, Silvered by the Moon
10. Wren Hinds - Razor Wing

A fresh chapter takes soft, sure shape for Cape Town-based singer-songwriter Wren Hinds on his new album. Released through Bella Union on 21st July 2023, Don’t Die in the Bundu follows Bella Union Pressings’ vinyl releases of Wren’s first three Bandcamp LPs. A gleaming set of gently dappled and poetic songs about fatherhood and fortitude, the album roots its restrained strength in an innate understanding of what matters most to us.

Wren’s own life began on the South-east coast of Kwazulu-Natal, South Africa. His father was a musician, his mother a landscape painter. While his dad inspired Wren to record whenever and wherever he could, his mother’s artform coloured his approach to songwriting: “painting with sound” is Wren’s description, a methodology illustrated by his use of light, shade and space to communicate powerful impressions and feelings.

Recorded at a timber cabin in the South Peninsula mountainside, about 40km outside of Cape Town, Don’t Die in the Bundu is at once a natural evolution from his earlier work…, a fresh start and a statement of commitment, embedded in its title. Drawn from “a few personal experiences,” says Wren, the inspiration for the title helps pinpoint its purpose. “It was inspired by a very old survival book distributed in South Africa and Zimbabwe. I had a few title options I was playing with, and around July 2022 a friend and I were held up at gunpoint in Cape Town. Fortunately we weren’t harmed or anything, but the whole ordeal helped me to settle on the title.”

Meanwhile, parenthood helped crystallise Wren’s perspective on the trials of our times. “I try not to be too pessimistic about the future, especially now that I have a kid. It forces me to look at the beauty in humanity and the mysterious nature of this place we call home. I guess, like everyone else, I’m often trying to figure out how it all fits together, and how we fit into this story… Now that I’m a father, I’d rather live in hope than in fear.” Richly subtle, deeply inquisitive, Don’t Die in the Bundu illustrates Wren’s preference beautifully.