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'Goddamn Outer Space' has officially landed: the bold new album from Lorraine Leckie & Her Demons

  • JP_RDFO
  • a few seconds ago
  • 2 min read
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Lorraine Leckie & Her Demons have released their eighth album, Goddamn Outer Space. More than just a record, it is a sonic ritual, a psychological excavation, and an open invitation. The album unfolds as a beautifully arranged mosaic of sounds, combining orchestral flourishes, raw folk grit, subtle electronics, and deeply poetic lyrics born from automatic writing.


Goddamn Outer Space stands as Leckie’s most ambitious work yet. It is textured, orchestral, atmospheric, and filled with the kind of fearless experimentation that defines her career. Created in close collaboration with guitarist and producer Hugh Pool (NY Blues Hall of Fame, Excello Recording), the album blurs the line between poetry and production. Pool built vast sonic landscapes around Leckie’s spontaneous lyrics, responding instinctively rather than adhering to arrangement or structure.



The result is a jagged yet cohesive portrait of modern disarray, capturing the surreal tension of recent years: war, famine, American collapse, and the lonely absurdity of a world mediated by technology. Every track feels like a transmission from another dimension, both familiar and unsettling.





After two years of unconventional creative exploration, Lorraine Leckie’s eighth record, Goddamn Outer Space, arrives at a pivotal moment for music, for our collective psyche, for the state of the world. More than just an album, it’s a sonic ritual, a psychological excavation, and an open invitation. It's a beautifully jigsawed mosaic of sounds: orchestral flourishes, raw folk grit, subtle electronics, and deeply poetic lyrics birthed through automatic writing.



This is Leckie’s most produced album to date. It’s textured, orchestral, atmospheric, and sonically adventurous. Crafted in close collaboration with guitarist Hugh Pool (NY Blues Hall of Fame, Excello Recording), Goddamn Outer Space blurs lines between poetry and production. Pool created vast sonic landscapes in response to Leckie’s spontaneous lyrics, building each track around her unfiltered expression rather than rehearsed arrangement. “She said what she said, and I did what I did,” Pool recalls. The result is a jagged but cohesive album that unfolds like a hallucinated memory of the last five years; war, famine, American collapse, and the lonely absurdity of a world mediated by technology.



Goddamn Outer Space by Lorraine Leckie and Her Demons is available now across music platforms.


 
 
 
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