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Data updated on 2025-07-24 07:54:42 UTC
Heaven (Paulien Iris Rondou aka Catbug) and Earth (Gaëtan Vandewoude aka Isbells) fell in love the third time they met. Unexpected. Sudden. A spark, a storm, a rush of butterflies. A leap into something new.
But life wasn’t simple; it wasn’t easy to meet in person. So they met in music.
It became their shared space to speak, to listen, to connect. In those first three months, eighteen songs quietly came to life. Not planned; just felt. When Heaven met Earth was born in that moment.
Their sound is warm, tender indie folk that moves between closeness and openness; songs shaped by longing, safety, silence, joy, and the mysterious force that pulls two people toward each other.
Their debut album (expected in 2026) explores every shade of love, with delicate string arrangements by Peter Broderick; a kindred musical spirit who touches them both deeply.
Inspired by artists like Bonnie Prince Billy, Sam Amidon, and Laura Marling, the music invites you in; not just to hear their story, but maybe to remember your own.
When Heaven Met Earth chooses a quiet path; one that puts connection before spectacle. They believe music doesn’t need to be loud to be powerful. Stripped-back and acoustic, their songs are meant to be shared up close: in living rooms, gardens, libraries, care homes, museums; anywhere people come together with open hearts.
Building a windmill by When Heaven met Earth is out now.
But life wasn’t simple; it wasn’t easy to meet in person. So they met in music.
It became their shared space to speak, to listen, to connect. In those first three months, eighteen songs quietly came to life. Not planned; just felt. When Heaven met Earth was born in that moment.
Their sound is warm, tender indie folk that moves between closeness and openness; songs shaped by longing, safety, silence, joy, and the mysterious force that pulls two people toward each other.
Their debut album (expected in 2026) explores every shade of love, with delicate string arrangements by Peter Broderick; a kindred musical spirit who touches them both deeply.
Inspired by artists like Bonnie Prince Billy, Sam Amidon, and Laura Marling, the music invites you in; not just to hear their story, but maybe to remember your own.
When Heaven Met Earth chooses a quiet path; one that puts connection before spectacle. They believe music doesn’t need to be loud to be powerful. Stripped-back and acoustic, their songs are meant to be shared up close: in living rooms, gardens, libraries, care homes, museums; anywhere people come together with open hearts.
Building a windmill by When Heaven met Earth is out now.
Total plays
10,378
Updated on 2025-07-24
Monthly listeners
6,853
Followers
65