From The Series of Songs “Altogether Unaccompanied” Vol. III & IV was announced in late July with the synth-pop gem “Claudion” via The Fader, who called the song “a sleek affair with soft, pulsating synths.” landing Montréal’s Helena Deland at the top of the Hype Machine artist chart, eventually making it onto Pitchfork’s 100 Best Songs of Q3 2018.
Now a beautiful, affectionately choreographed video for the song has premiered via PItchfork TV. Speaking of the video and the song’s origins, Helena says “The song is overall about the constancy of my relying on and trusting in my cousin Claudia. I marvel at how our relationship has remained essentially similar going through the extremes of childhood and adolescence and into the heavier nuances of adulthood. I have no footage of the choreography we’d make up and practice for months before we’d present them to our dads’ side of the family at Christmas, so this is a selfish homage to one of the ways we’d spend endless time around the age of 10.”
Helena’s new collection of songs, From The Series of Songs “Altogether Unaccompanied” Vol III. and IV. was just released on October 19th via Luminelle Recordings, and also features the intimate acoustic guitar-laden “Rise” which saw Helena fall “into a gentle, dreamier state” according to Stereogum, wherein Helena plaintively expresses a desire for intimacy with an avoidant person, along with the single “Lean On You” which ended up on Pitchfork’s What’s Good This Week playlist, and deemed one of Under The Radar’s Best Songs of the Week.
In mid-November, Helena will kick off a run of shows in her native Canada, immediately followed by dates in the Midwest and the Northeast, hitting Cleveland and Pittsburgh for the first time, before making her way to California for a couple of co-headline dates in San Francisco and Los Angeles with Buzzy Lee.
There’s no discernible pattern to Helena Deland’s latest release. On the third and fourth volumes of From The Series of Songs “Altogether Unaccompanied” the Montréal-based artist has amassed a collection of memories in song form, more like a box of old photos or unsent letters than a traditional EP.
“The songs are to be considered as their own little things,” she says about her unconventional release structure. “They are part of something larger, yes, but they live on their own.” As a listener, however, there is an undeniable cohesion to Vol. III and IV, and to the previous iterations of the project: each song is nostalgic, intimate, and indelible.
References abound, but the sound is all her own. Musical and literary influences weave through with ease, underscored by her dynamic vocals and clever lyricism. Deland’s constant journaling has allowed her songwriting to mature organically.
“I’m learning to be really patient,” she says, “I can’t really force writing. When I’m ready to write a song the words and melody are usually there.”
HelenaDeland.com

Download: Cover Vol. III (jpg) • Cover Vol. IV (jpg) • Photo (jpg) Credit photo: Jodi Heartz & Alex Blouin

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