Los Angeles-based artist Claire George will release her long-awaited debut album The Land Beyond The Light via Cascine on May 21st, and today she shares the second single off of the record. Following Pink Elephants is “I Promise,” a track that features Claire’s pristine vocals front and center, alongside nostalgic synth currents and skeletal UK garage-indebted breakbeats, stirring feelings of electric lust and yearning. About the track, George said “‘I Promise’ is about staying devoted to the people you love even when they are struggling to be their best selves. It’s about the importance of holding space for people to exist in whatever shape they show up in, and a reminder to those who feel flawed or unworthy that they are singularly spectacular.” Check out the song now HERE, and watch a performance video of the track below. 

While Claire George’s stunning self-produced and self-written debut EP Bodies of Water was notable for its wide-eyed celestial synth-pop, The Land Beyond the Light delves deeper into George’s swath of dance and pop influences. The album was initially inspired by a 2019 heartbreak, but the tone and tenor of the writing process changed when George suddenly lost her friend, an ex-boyfriend, to substance abuse. The loss of this significant person in her life left George to reckon with questions of addiction and grief, while exploring new sonic vocabularies in which to house them. The result is an achingly human document of life; an album in turns ecstatic and elegiac. 

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How do we cope with the gulf between us and those we’ve lost? On The Land Beyond The Light, the debut full-length album by Claire George, the Los-Angeles artist aims to answer that question. The Land Beyond The Light was initially conceived as a break-up record, largely inspired by a tough split Claire was going through in late 2019. She wrote the album opener “You Don’t Feel The Same” in the immediate aftermath, charting a course for a record channeling her feelings about the dissolution of relationships. “When that relationship fell apart, I felt really angry,” Claire says. “As I set out to write this album, I envisioned it being much harsher, being fresh off of the break-up.” The writing process shifted, however, in the wake of another personal tragedy: the death of one of Claire’s close friends, an ex-boyfriend, as a result of substance abuse. “Everything changed when he passed away,” she says. When Claire returned to the songs she had written for the album, they took on a new meaning filtered through her grief. “So many of the songs, whether they were about him when I first wrote them or not, are about him now. And this record is for him.” 

One of the tragedies of addiction is that it can make us feel lost to those who are suffering, even before they’re gone. “Most of these songs express the desperation of wanting to help someone you love, but who you cannot possibly save from themselves,” Claire explains. “There is this thread of desperately wanting someone to break free from their afflictions, and the heartbreak associated with knowing you cannot change someone.” 
Claire’s writing process coincided with her grieving process, and the spirit of her late friend was stamped indelibly onto the album: memories of their relationship, imagined what-if scenarios, her competing feelings of gratitude and grief. The result is a stunning and multi-layered collection of songs that marvels at life and the beauty of the world around us, even in its most tragic moments.