Little Mazarn - Mustang Island - New LP Record 2025 Dear Life Vinyl - Indie Rock / Folk / Lo-Fi
Little Mazarn - Mustang Island - New LP Record 2025 Dear Life Vinyl - Indie Rock / Folk / Lo-Fi
Mustang Island, the third album from Austin-based band Little Mazarn, is a gentle force. Waves of grief crest like surf on the Texas coast. Wild horses break through long-shuttered gates, only to come back around. Lead songwriter, vocalist, and multi-instrumentalist Lindsey Verrill (she/her) joins bandmates Jeff Johnston (he/him) and Carolina Chauffe (they/them). The ten-song collection continues work with Dear Life Records. A full-throated romp through the capabilities of community-minded songcraft, Mustang Island is both naturalistic and futuristic, completely recasting Little Mazarnâs origins in primitive folk. Instead, the band reaches towards sonic experimentation and spacious expansion. Â Lindseyâs heart-opening vocals and Jeffâs singing saw, both trademarks of the project, mix with unexpected bombastic drums, dissonant synthesizers, and a chorus of orchestral oddities. This mid-career ode dances confidently in the creative liberties granted by decades in the game â more dazzlingly lively, and honestly somber, than ever before. Â The bandâs crossroads branch across prominent Southern outsider music: On cello, Lindsey has recorded with Patty Griffin and Dana Falconberry. The longtime side player wouldnât write her first song until age 34. Jeff has played in Bill Callahanâs band, as well as with Liâl Cap'n Travis and Orange Mothers. Carolina is known for prolific solo project hemlock. Little Mazarn has also collaborated with Lomelda to release their last EP, Honey Island General Store (2023), following past LPs Texas River Song (2022) and Io (2019). Â Alongside silliness and reverence, including covers from Kate Wolf and Bob Wills & His Texas Playboys, grief directs much of Mustang Island. Lindsey left her job of seventeen years teaching cello at a local school. Recording also aligned with the passing of Jeffâs father, a career educator in Jeff and Lindseyâs hometown of Dallas. Â âGrief, and the avoidance of grief, is a big part of being human,â says Lindsey. âYou make a choice, and then you grieve for the other choice. Or you finish a meal and literally grieve that it was so good. If you really befriend grief, youâre like, âOh, itâs here, in this pancake, which I loved so much that I ate the whole thing, and now itâs gone.â
Original: $21.99
-65%$21.99
$7.70
Description
Mustang Island, the third album from Austin-based band Little Mazarn, is a gentle force. Waves of grief crest like surf on the Texas coast. Wild horses break through long-shuttered gates, only to come back around. Lead songwriter, vocalist, and multi-instrumentalist Lindsey Verrill (she/her) joins bandmates Jeff Johnston (he/him) and Carolina Chauffe (they/them). The ten-song collection continues work with Dear Life Records. A full-throated romp through the capabilities of community-minded songcraft, Mustang Island is both naturalistic and futuristic, completely recasting Little Mazarnâs origins in primitive folk. Instead, the band reaches towards sonic experimentation and spacious expansion. Â Lindseyâs heart-opening vocals and Jeffâs singing saw, both trademarks of the project, mix with unexpected bombastic drums, dissonant synthesizers, and a chorus of orchestral oddities. This mid-career ode dances confidently in the creative liberties granted by decades in the game â more dazzlingly lively, and honestly somber, than ever before. Â The bandâs crossroads branch across prominent Southern outsider music: On cello, Lindsey has recorded with Patty Griffin and Dana Falconberry. The longtime side player wouldnât write her first song until age 34. Jeff has played in Bill Callahanâs band, as well as with Liâl Cap'n Travis and Orange Mothers. Carolina is known for prolific solo project hemlock. Little Mazarn has also collaborated with Lomelda to release their last EP, Honey Island General Store (2023), following past LPs Texas River Song (2022) and Io (2019). Â Alongside silliness and reverence, including covers from Kate Wolf and Bob Wills & His Texas Playboys, grief directs much of Mustang Island. Lindsey left her job of seventeen years teaching cello at a local school. Recording also aligned with the passing of Jeffâs father, a career educator in Jeff and Lindseyâs hometown of Dallas. Â âGrief, and the avoidance of grief, is a big part of being human,â says Lindsey. âYou make a choice, and then you grieve for the other choice. Or you finish a meal and literally grieve that it was so good. If you really befriend grief, youâre like, âOh, itâs here, in this pancake, which I loved so much that I ate the whole thing, and now itâs gone.â













