New Single 'Weekend Blues' Out Now!
Love Drunk Hearts make music that speaks to the messiness, beauty, and complexity of modern life. Drawing widely from indie, classic and surf rock influences, their songs land in an interesting sonic middle ground; a space that allows for atmosphere to build and stories to develop.
Having released the singles ‘Roam’, ‘Let It Flow’, ‘Park The Cars’, ‘Those Boys’ and ‘Undertow’ with support from Triple J Unearthed and FBi Radio, the band quickly built up a strong local following due to their polished and passionate live show and emphasis on refined, quality songwriting. With support slots including Triple J favourite Ruby Fields and Australian rock icons Mi Sex, the band have also accumulated over 15,000 Monthly Listeners and 200,000 Total Streams on Spotify.
‘Roam’ saw the band gather support from Spotify with additions to editorial playlists ‘Fresh Finds AU & NZ’ and ‘Coastal Drive’ alongside Triple J contemporaries such as Dope Lemon, Spacey Jane and Lime Cordiale, while also charting at No.4 for Indie in Australia on SubmitHub. The songs ‘Park The Cars’ and ‘Those Boys’ - recorded and mixed by producer Oscar Dawson of Holy Holy - saw the band up the ante, exploring new sonic textures while still retaining their trademark earnest approach to crafting songs.
The band has taken another adventurous step forward with their latest offering ‘Weekend Blues’, due to be released in August 2022. The track was recorded in the UK at Woodbine Street Recording Studio, Leamington Spa with UK music legend John Rivers, who recorded, mixed, mastered and produced the song. In this track, lead vocalist Aaron shares vocal duties with UK based artist Ash Dable. The song speaks to all those blink and you’ll miss weekends where you’re caught up in the moment with friends, having a blast and time just flies on by and nothing else matters. The addition of new instrumentalists lends the song a different style, providing the listener with a lush and comforting soundscape that acts as the perfect remedy to the sharp reality of Monday morning coming around again too soon.
Their new work signals a sense of clarity and focus that promises to reward repeated listens as the songs make themselves at home on your playlist, or better still, your record collection.
LDH are honest. LDH are real. LDH are good for you.