"[Generationals]' most-ambitious manifestation of warm, danceable indie pop balms yet." - Paste

“Even in this age where churning out music by the dozen is the norm, the duo often takes their time crafting music that speaks to their soul and draws the listener in.” - Earmilk

 "A full-circle moment...a sense of maturity." - FLOOD

Effortless and endearing, Heatherhead is not only the best Generationals album yet, but also the one that, after all these years, finds Ted Joyner and Grant Widmer epitomizing their sound at last. Distinct but familiar, wry but warm, soft but pointed - it's easy to hear that the duo have dug deeper into the juxtapositions that make their music so compelling to find the sound they've been pursuing from the start. Listen to the record today and order your copy on the must-have limited edition vinyl (pictured above) on Pink/White Mix w/ Black Splatter.

In a move that validated their trust in the process and respective enthusiasms, Grant & Ted created Heatherhead after scrapping an EP that sounded great but didn’t quite meet their standards. Why busy everyone else with the rigamarole of releasing a record when they weren’t convinced by it themselves? Instead of churning out substandard "content," Ted left the band's hometown of New Orleans to meet with Grant in Madison, WI where these new songs would take shape and ultimately embody a sort of sonic thesis statement. 

Back in their respective quarters, the pair went to work with multi-instrumentalist, producer, and pal Nick Krill, creating a cross-country file-sharing triangle. They moved quickly, finishing Heatherhead in a mere matter of months. These are the sorts of songs you want to stay with for a while, to crawl inside of and have a look around for all the crafty details: a thick riff on “Dirt Diamond” that frames a vulnerable admission, the taut rhythm section of “Hard Times for Heatherhead,” the muted funk of “Eutropius (Give Me Lies),” and the marvelous seesaw of opener “Waking Moment” as it squeezes a dozen dynamic shifts and at least half as many hooks into just four minutes. Across 11 songs, Generationals have thoughtfully crafted no-fuss, no-filler manifestations built to stand the test of time.

Catch Generationals on tour across the US this fall - tickets on sale now.