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Song Sung

Announce debut album 'This Ascension Is Ours', out July 31st via Night Time Stories

and Share new single & video "Telling Tales"

Song Sung, made of up of twin sisters Georgina and Una McGeough, will release their debut album 'This Ascension Is Ours' on July 31st via Night Time Stories. They're sharing their new single & video from the record "Telling Tales"


Speaking about the track, the band said 

"'Telling Tales' is the result of a melodic collision - it's a dream, a memory, a voyage that exists inside a reverberating loop. This track reverts back to how we initially began making music and our continuous quest to find the melody within a melody."



Director Padraig Timoney spoke about the video for "Telling Tales" saying

"The material is a single take of a wild bog landscape in Ireland, seen from the passenger side of a car, with the camera attached to a rotating apparatus. The set-up, rotation and transportation accompanies Telling Tales' organisation melodies and key lyrics concerning the act of seeing, the forming of sequenced, dream and real images.

This video emphasises that the eyes are both recording and active devices, specifically located."


Georgina and Una McGeough who comprise Song Sung, grew up in Monaghan, a gnat’s width away from the border with Northern Ireland. Despite their relative geographic isolation, theirs was a stimulating childhood. 

“We had a very normal upbringing, but we were music-obsessed children” 

says Una.

 “Our father played in showbands in the ’70s and ’80s, so music was very prevalent at home. Our mother applied a creative twist to everything she touched, so we inherited that mindset.”


The pair admit that they first went to Belfast School of Art to get closer to music: 

“inretrospect, I think we used art school as a way to develop and incorporate sound / musical ideas into our practice, because it's always been about the music. We definitely had a strong interest in visual art, but music interested us the most."


Over a decade ago, they moved to New York, where they’ve been resident ever since, somehow forging careers in the art world, while simultaneously managing to amass this vast catalogue of material in, quite frankly, the most unorthodox way imaginable (possibly contributing to the idiosyncrasies of their songwriting). 

“We make melodies using alternative ways, but we also dabble in software” 

explains Georgina

“in the beginning, we created melodies by using our own vocals over some of our favourite

 music. Our first apartment in the East Village, was located above a bar and our back room

was situated directly above the DJ booth.

This is going to sound ridiculous, but it’s true, we started making melodies over the bass of the tracks coming through the floor from the bar below.” 

From that, a process of layering vocals, however obscure, was how the band started to formulate songs.


Via a mutual friend, the filmmaker Seamus Harahan, Song Sung got a connection to David Holmes

“At the time, Seamus was working with David on a collaborative project – in an effort to exchange work, he sent us a track to work on, so we pulled something together fairly quickly and sent it back,” 

says Una.

'David loved it', so Georgina got his contact details from a mutual friend in New York. 

"I sent David an email,” continues Georgina, "and suggested meeting to talk about music, even though an album wasn’t even really on our agenda.

David got in touch and we arranged to meet later in the year.”


That meeting was in December 2015 and by early 2016, they spent three days holed up in Holmes’ studio laying down the tracks for an album. They had been collaboratively bouncing tracks back and forth between New York and Belfast for a short period, with Holmes sending the arrangements and Song Sung writing the lyrics and vocal melodies.


Fast forward four years and the result is a hypnotically unique sound that is strangely anthemic, coming on like a space-age girl-group transmitting directly from Jupiter. Holmes, known for his many film scores co-wrote and produced the album with fellow composer and Unloved band-mate Keefus Ciancia (True DetectiveThe Ladykillers). The pair have a long standing working relationship and have worked on numerous scores including The Fall and Killing Eve (for which they won a BAFTA) as well as both Unloved albums.


“We were very excited to work with David and the process worked amazingly well. He got us immediately", 

claims Una. Georgina nods her approval. 

“Working on this album was an absolute dream. We only hope that the songs resonate, as they make their journey out into the world."

Song Sung - This Ascension Is Ours

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