We are currently migrating our data. We expect the process to take 24 to 48 hours before everything is back to normal.

Last updated: 10 hours ago

In a time drenched in escapism, where an unceasing barrage of synthetic shine promises comfort and relief from facing the complexity of our natures, Taylor Kingman’s new album Hollow Sound is an antithetical long night in a solitary cave, with nothing but a small fire and a hard look inward to keep you company.

Between his work fronting <a href="spotify:artist:2j3EKaRC7ZfBFiQQdBCwZG" data-name="TK &amp; The Holy Know-Nothings">TK &amp; The Holy Know-Nothings</a> and his 2017 solo debut <a href="spotify:album:1IyRsD3pVd2iTzxeYUKR6P" data-name="Wannabe">Wannabe</a>, Kingman is no stranger to the darkness. But here he transcends the desolate rock bottom, as Hollow Sound whispers, then howls us into that place beyond brokenness where breathing begins again. To listen deeply to these songs is to lay down naked on the wet, unforgiving earth, pushing the ground through your fingers; it is to be soothed by the wholeness of who we are, filth and all. Kingman pulls no punches with his writing and requires us to listen with the same honesty.

-Written by <a href="spotify:artist:7mIGDvDuuObf7vdxapVrmZ" data-name="Jeffrey Martin">Jeffrey Martin</a>

Monthly Listeners

2,126

Followers

3,289

Top Cities

76 listeners
31 listeners
26 listeners
25 listeners
22 listeners

Social Media