You Held It All

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Release Date
DescriptionExcerpt

The Staves’ “You Held It All,” their first new music since the release of their 2021 album, Good Woman, is also the group’s first recording as the duo of Jessica and Camilla Staveley-Taylor, following their sister and bandmate Emily’s stepping back after the birth of her children. Produced by John Congleton in Los Angeles, “‘You Held It All’ is a song about understanding, and the knots we tie ourselves in when we don’t express our truth,” The Staves say, “and how much power and freedom there can be when we do.”

Description

The Staves released “You Held It All,” their first new music since the release of 2021’s Good Woman LP, on September 14, 2023. “You Held It All” is also the group’s first recording as the duo of Jessica and Camilla Staveley-Taylor, following their sister and bandmate Emily Staveley-Taylor’s decision to step back after the birth of her first baby (she has recently had a second child, too).

“You Held It All” was produced by John Congleton in Los Angeles. Congleton, who also helmed production for Good Woman, assisted in creating the much more live, spontaneous feel to the studio process that the Staveley-Taylors were keen to investigate.

“‘You Held It All’ is a song about understanding, and the knots we tie ourselves in when we don’t express our truth; and how much power and freedom there can be when we do,” The Staves explain.

The past few years have been a period of significant change for The Staves, with not only a line-up shift, but also other enduring and welcome alterations in their lives, for good and for bad. Such life experiences have unsurprisingly found their way into the lyrics, too (now written by the two sisters, rather than among all three).

Since 2012, when The Staves first introduced themselves with those crystalline three-part harmonies and their lilting folk-informed songcraft, the ‘classic’ Staves sound has also undergone subtle but noteworthy change, and with “You Held It All, the band enters a new chapter entirely. What remains, though, is their ear for captivating melody and verse.

Album Status
Artist Name
The Staves
reissues?
new-release
Cover Art
UPC/Price
Label
48/24 HD FLAC
Price
1.39
UPC
075597901504
Label
MP3
Price
1.29
UPC
075597901139

Track Listing

News & Reviews

  • The Staves have shared a video of them giving an acoustic performance of "I Don't Say It, But I Feel It," a song from their latest album, All Now, and their new acoustic EP, Happy New Year. You can watch it here:

  • "This was written at a cottage in the English countryside in winter where we had gone on a writing retreat to escape the noise of London," the Staves' Jessica and Camilla Staveley say of their new song, "Sitting By the Fire," out today. "On a cigarette break, Jessica went outside in the dark and could see Camilla through the window, sat at the fireplace writing a song. The song is a photograph of sorts, capturing that moment. We recorded this after we had cut the record [All Now] out in LA. We were back in London and revisited this tune and we felt that it would really be perfect to have [our sister] Emily join us on it to lend her voice to this a cappella recording."

  • About This Album

    The Staves released “You Held It All,” their first new music since the release of 2021’s Good Woman LP, on September 14, 2023. “You Held It All” is also the group’s first recording as the duo of Jessica and Camilla Staveley-Taylor, following their sister and bandmate Emily Staveley-Taylor’s decision to step back after the birth of her first baby (she has recently had a second child, too).

    “You Held It All” was produced by John Congleton in Los Angeles. Congleton, who also helmed production for Good Woman, assisted in creating the much more live, spontaneous feel to the studio process that the Staveley-Taylors were keen to investigate.

    “‘You Held It All’ is a song about understanding, and the knots we tie ourselves in when we don’t express our truth; and how much power and freedom there can be when we do,” The Staves explain.

    The past few years have been a period of significant change for The Staves, with not only a line-up shift, but also other enduring and welcome alterations in their lives, for good and for bad. Such life experiences have unsurprisingly found their way into the lyrics, too (now written by the two sisters, rather than among all three).

    Since 2012, when The Staves first introduced themselves with those crystalline three-part harmonies and their lilting folk-informed songcraft, the ‘classic’ Staves sound has also undergone subtle but noteworthy change, and with “You Held It All, the band enters a new chapter entirely. What remains, though, is their ear for captivating melody and verse.