New Music Friday can be a lot. That's why every week we cut it down to the songs you need to hear for PLAY, our new music edit, and deliver a new cover feature to go alongside it. This week... Au/Ra.
Pop has always had a problem signing up young talent. It conscripts them early, extracts whatever is commercially useful, and then, when situations get complicated, leaves them to work it out in their own time. A striking number of twentysomething pop stars can be found, at any given moment, attempting the solo-career equivalent of a difficult rebirth: the teenage hit buried under a fresh set of tattoos, a notably less family-friendly album title, or, in the case of Jamie Stenzel, a full-bore concept record about being trapped inside a dungeon of one's own mind.
It has been nearly eight years since Stenzel - or Au/Ra, as she’s better known - released a song called 'Panic Room' that she wrote, by her own account, about not being terribly well. The CamelPhat remix of it went platinum in the UK, made the Top 40 and has since accumulated a streaming tally that, depending on which metric you trust, runs somewhere north of 300 million. She was 16 at the time. The same year, she featured on Alan Walker's 'Darkside', all of which briefly made her a serious commercial proposition - a green-haired Antiguan-German teenager who wrote pensive alt-pop, delivered EDM hooks with a slightly spooky clarity and had been raised in her parents' studio so thoroughly that her first song was written at 12.
Then, for the next few years, things didn’t really go as expected.
The odd feature, some EP material, a handful of collaborations with the likes of Gryffin and San Holo. But nothing like the momentum her first run implied, and certainly no debut album. The reason lay in a set of behind-the-scenes issues that stalled things at a crucial moment. But now, she's ready to realise that potential.
That album, 'heartcore', is out in June on Polydor, and it is - her words, these - "a concept album and it quite literally follows me healing from a dark place. It follows a hero's journey arc of me going through the dungeon of my mind, trying to heal from past trauma and regaining my hope for the future." She began work on it at a point when she had no idea whether any of it would ever be heard. "A few years ago, when I started making this record, I didn't even know if it was ever going to be able to come out, so now being at this point feels really… I don't know, full circle? It feels wild."














