Firestations - Many White Horses [LP / CD]
Firestations - Many White Horses [LP / CD]
MANY WHITE HORSES, the new album from FIRESTATIONS.
RELEASED 25th APRIL 2025
Available as a süper-limited edition LP or CD in custom digi-pak, both come with a printed zine. Also available as an LP + CD + zine bundle.
PostMap Club subscribers, remember to use your discount! (check PostMap newsletter for code!)
TRACKLISTING
1. All The Way Back Down Here
2. The River Knows
3. Reading The Water
4. Many White Horses
5. Bloodstone Hill
6. A Weight Starts To Lift
7. I Only Once Heard Them Singing
8. The Castle Is Wrong
9 . Silversands
Many White Horses is the brand-new album by eclectic London art-pop ensemble Firestations. Set for release on Lost Map Records on limited-edition 12” vinyl and via digital services on April 25, 2025, the album is a collection of sea-soaked acoustic songs and instrumentals, interwoven with field recordings and lyrics drawn from the immediate surroundings of a sailing expedition, all brought together with warm, textured production.
Firestations’ fourth full-length album is in essence a solo album by the band’s singer and songwriter Mike Cranny, who self-produced and played a variety of instruments on the record, albeit it’s enriched too by contributions from bandmate Laura Copsey on flugelhorn, flute and vocals. Many White Horses follows Firestations’ expansive and explorative 2021 EP trilogy Automatic Tendencies and the 2023 album Thick Terrain, both of which garnered support from BBC 6 Music, including repeat plays from Gideon Coe, Cerys Matthews, Radcliffe & Maconie and in particular Marc Riley, who hailed the track ‘Small Island’ as “a perfect pop song”.
About lead-single, ‘A Weight Starts to Life’, Mike writes:
“I’ve been messing about with open-tuned fingerpicking for years, ever since I got into Nick Drake as a teenager, but I’ve hardly ever made it work for a song as I get too obsessed with getting the picking right and quickly lose focus. This time, somehow, I made it past my own gatekeeper and in the end wrote this song really quickly. It’s about the joy of having an adventure and not wanting it to end.”
Firestations are Mike Cranny, Laura Copsey, Martin Thompson (aka Bit Cloudy), Tom Hargreaves and Neil Walsh. Their music spans genres from shoegaze to alt-pop and harmony-driven psychedelia. Their second album and their debut for Lost Map, The Year Dot, released in 2018, was followed by sonic collage album Dream Home in 2020 and the Automatic Tendencies EP project in 2020-21. The latter took the form of three EPs over a six-month period, each including alternative “sunken” versions by the band as well as covers and remixes of the band’s tracks by other artists. Thick Terrain, released in 2023, saw Firestations return to album format with ten tracks ranging from hypnotic sci-fi landscapes to addictive dream-pop jangles, exploring ideas around identity, conflict, progress and sanity.
Many White Horses was conceived and largely written at the beginning of August 2024 on a sailing yacht (Sail Britain’s “Merlin”) in the Inner Hebrides. This was the location for a week-long art residency with seven fellow artist-explorers all keen to capture something of the essence of being at sea and viewing the land from the sea. The voyage, through high winds and waves, took in the mysterious Isle of Rum and the coastline around Arisaig, before Mike and Laura continued the journey for a further week; travelling around the Ardnamurchan peninsula, across the Isles of Mull and Ulva to end up off-grid on the remote Isle of Gometra.
While the music, with its focus on quietly hypnotic, hushed acoustic instrumentation, may at first appear something of a departure from the last five-piece band Firestations album Thick Terrain, it remains closely related and recognisable by Mike’s song writing style. It also occupies a similar space to the “sunken versions” – quieter and slower songs (featuring on the Automatic Tendencies EP series in particular) that focus on the more meditative, stripped back side of the band.
The title track ‘Many White Horses’ was the first song to be written, making use of an aging sea-warped boat guitar that Mike discovered could only be played in an open tuning, with a capo higher up the fret board. Mike says: “The limitations of this guitar proved to be a gateway to other songs – the chord progressions and melodies had to be simple to avoid tuning nightmares, and where I might have ordinarily decided that a song was too straightforward, on the boat I didn’t have a choice but to persevere with simple song ideas. It turns out that limitations can be liberating”. The first single from the album ‘A Weight Starts To Lift’ was written a bit later and shows Mike exploring the possibilities of the open tuning “maybe the trickiest fingerpicking I’ve ever attempted”.
The communal living conditions on the boat and the camaraderie developed through the everyday routine, and in other artist’s processes, made for a fertile environment. Laura, as expedition leader, provided a series of creative prompts, shaped by archipelago poetics. Moments and provocations that filtered into lyrics and rhythms included a collaboration with a square meter of earth, seeking out an audience on a micro scale, and reading laminated sheets of poetry in the sea. Field recordings and found instruments also give the compositions a strong sense of place and carry the listener across rough seas and onto remote islands.
Other songs, such as ‘All The Way Back Down Here’, were written after returning home to London and respond to the disorientating change of pace that often comes with being back in a city. These songs are more of a reflection on memory, loss, and the transience of experience. Mike sings about “holding onto the intention” and asks, “how does it feel to return?”. On album closer ‘Silversands’, there is a sense of peace in the final lyrics “the island will still be here when you’re not around”.
* Many White Horses is a term on the Beaufort Scale of wind force used to describe a sea state when there are many white caps / breaking waves. According to the scale, in these conditions there will be “moderate waves of pronounced long form, many white horses, some spray”.
https://linktr.ee/firestations