White Lucy

EXCLUSIVE // WHITE LUCY LETS “RED BIRD” FLY WITH EMOTIONAL NEW SINGLE

Particularly in times like these, it pays to be able to give yourself space – a moment to breathe, to be vulnerable, and wonder rhetorically “what the hell is going on?” But if you’re the kind of person who has a hard time carving that kind of thing out for yourself, music can act as a subtle but effective solution.

One moment you’re driving on the way to the grocery store, vaguely tallying the things you need and forgot to put on your list, the next you’re legit blubbering and coming apart at the intersection thanks to a mere moment of nostalgic melody.

In a way, Chicago’s White Lucy seem to specialize in this – indie rock designed to pierce, and maybe even inspire pause through emotionally raw delivery. It’s got hints of modern shoegaze a la Soft Cult and Hotline TNT, but also streaks of Delta Sleep and Great Grandpa. Check out “Red Bird” below, an exclusive cut below from their new album The Paradise, due out August 15th via Shuga Records:

The single’s slow but unstoppable pace is absolutely therapeutic through headphones, thanks much in part to Brok Mende’s production, who’s name you probably remember from some of Audiotree’s most articulate sessions, where he used to engineer. Here’s more on the band itself from the press release:

White Lucy — the Chicago-based duo of Chase Carson and Micah Boyce — first met in the early 2000s while playing in post-hardcore bands. They formed White Lucy in 2016 and released their debut album Can’t Feel Right in 2019. After a pandemic hiatus, the pair began writing their follow-up in 2022, recording throughout 2023.

That follow-up, The Paradise, arrives August 15, independently released with vinyl available via Shuga Records. The album was recorded, mixed, mastered, and executive produced by Brok Mende of Friends of Friends Recording (Luke Titus, Sen Morimoto, NNAMDÏ, Madison McFerrin, KAINA), with additional recording from Michael Franz Novak of Chicago Electric Piano Co. and Dark Canyon. A wide range of keys, synthesizers, and vintage organs from the Piano Co. were used to craft the record’s lush, layered soundscapes.

The Paradise features contributions from some of Chicago’s most celebrated and emerging artists. Semiratruth delivers a haunting verse on the title track, Sen Morimoto’s saxophone soars in a three-minute jazz-inspired breakdown, and TALK TALK TOUCH (formerly Jordanna) adds a smooth, soulful turn on the single “Love On Ya.” Chicago heavyweights Wyatt Waddell and Khaliyah X lend their powerful voices to the album’s rich background harmonies.

Opening track “Red Bird” sets the tone with a jolt. It’s raw, gritty, and maybe not what listeners expect from a White Lucy album—but it’s the perfect gateway into a record that thrives on keeping its audience on their toes.

Conceptually, The Paradise opens in familiar territory—songs about love, friendship, anxiety, ambition, and the quiet ache of wanting more. At first, it plays like a reflection of the everyday, steeped in the kinds of questions we all ask but rarely answer. And then, midway through, everything shifts. A voicemail breaks the narrative, and suddenly, the record steps into deeper water.

From that point on, every earlier theme is reexamined under the weight of mortality. What does love mean in the face of loss? What does purpose look like when time is running out? The album doesn’t offer answers so much as it wrestles with the absurdity of asking.

Still, in the end, The Paradise arrives somewhere tender—suggesting that maybe the mundane isn’t meaningless after all. Maybe it’s everything.

(Thanks for reading! If you’re looking for more music, check out our Bandcamp compilations here. If you like us, or possibly even love us, donations are always appreciated at the Buy Me A Coffee page here, but if you’re in a generous mood you can also donate to folks like Doctors Without Borders, the PCRF, Charity Water, Kindness Ranch, One Tail at A Time, Canopy Cat Rescue, or Best Friends Animal Sanctuary that could probably use it more – click on their names above to check ‘em out if you’re so inclined. Thanks again!)