
O Avalanche
Fionn Reganâs 2024 album O Avalanche, available on vinyl for the first time.Â
"I float sometimes when youâre around,â sings Irish singer-songwriter Fionn Regan on âIslandsâ, setting the weightlessly romantic tenor for his seventh album. Written in Spain, O Avalanche is an album of levitating intimacies, abstract and intuitive yet infused with a tangible sense of the elevating ties between environment and emotion. Between its sun-dappled backdrops and lambent arrangements, the result is a set of sublime songs and something more: itâs a record to float with, immersive, uplifting and transporting.Â
His first since 2019âs beautiful Cala, itâs also an album that is, in Fionnâs words, âvery much on a levelâ â shimmering with poetic mystery and bolstered by a sustained feel for atmosphere and shape. As Fionn explains, âI see it sort of like a film that starts cinematically and develops in abstract ways. It moves in different sequences, backwards and forwards. And if youâre thinking about it in a visual way, thereâs a quality about it where itâs always magic hour.âÂ
Rippling like the sea, âIslandsâ sets that magic-hour mood, using images of the sun and moonlit dances on Spanish sand to set a dreamy scene. Buoyant and urgent, the song introduces the recordâs world with a kind of classicist immediacy; it seems to arrive fully formed, as if the space it evokes is eternal. âWhen I wrote that song it was like there was something cosmic about it, because it doesnât sound like my other songs,â says Fionn. âI felt like it was almost a gift from The Beatles or whatever wellspring they drew on. I remember being in Mallorca and thinking, âWere The Beatles ever here?â Not that Iâm saying itâs on their level but it has some sort of cosmic flow to it.âÂ
That flow leads to Valencia for the luminous âTeix Mountainâ, which evokes the off-piste mountain spirit of its title and the album as a whole. Its rarefied sense of romanticism also extends to the title track, where Fionnâs long-standing friend Anna Friel provides subtle, beautiful backing vocals for an almost hallucinatory hymn to companionship. Braided with haunting references to storms and âsummer ghostsâ, itâs a song lit with inner faith, breaking out in the declaration, âI believe thereâs a light that brings good souls together.â âA lot of my writing has a kind of abstract-expressionistic way of falling together and assembling itself,â says Fionn, âbut I also love it when something is simple and timeless â where it just bursts into something else.âÂ
Good souls duly unite beneath a stormy and star-lit sky in the gorgeous reverie of âBlood Is Thicker Than Wineâ, a song bursting with impressionistic detail. âThat song has an instant visual thing about it to me,â says Fionn, a description borne out by lyrics of such evocative power, you can picture the scene immediately: two lovers under the moon, laughing and lit by lightning. âAnja IIâ unspools with a similar scene-setting clarity, telling a story in increments â âScene change/Spotlights onâ â and providing an epic shift for the recordâs sure sense of structure. Â
From here, O Avalanche moves from a sense of loved-up drift to a state of serene, unforced resolve. âWritten in a dream,â says Fionn, âFarewellâ is a tenderly up-tempo take on partings, sorrowed yet beautifully becalmed in its looping arrangement. âInto the Light of the Sunâ has a feeling of resolution about it, unfurling âlike a burst of energy,â says Fionn. âHeadphonesâ is a near-hymnal beauty, Reganâs beatific vocals referencing fleeting moments half-remembered over mellifluous ripples of glinting guitar. The albumâs rhyming motifs of oceans, sunlight, waves, tsunamis and names written on skin seem to coalesce here, like snapshots stored for reminiscence. Finally, closer âDeiĂ Song/Llucalcariâ resembles a soft, supple awakening from a dream of summer, eyes wide open in readiness for new horizons.Â
âI feel like the album has got quite a lot of bottled-summer energy running through it,â says Fionn. It took him two or three albumsâ worth of material to find the songs that felt simpatico â the ones that âstarted to hang out together and fought their way to becoming the albumâ. Capturing the mood, Fionn wrote the record while staying in Majorca, a place he describes as his âtrue northâ: âThereâs a sense of an artistic energy there, where you step back a little from the main drag of bigger cities. Youâre sat there in the mountains looking towards the cities, rather than the other way. Thereâs a kind of focus, a feeling that youâre tuned in to something.âÂ
Regan has fine-tuned a sensibility of his own since the acoustic poetry of his debut, 2006âs acclaimed The End of History. Since then, he has travelled between band-based detours and the gleaming likes of 2011âs 100 Acres of Sycamore, whose worry-worn beauty âDogwood Blossomâ drew new audiences when it found kindred spirits in two TV shows, romantic lockdown hit Normal People and Shane Meadowsâs This Is England. Oscar-winning actor Cillian Murphy featured in the video for 2017âs âThe Meetings of the Watersâ, while elsewhere Regan has been nominated for Mercury, Choice, Meteor Ireland and Shortlist awards, sampled by Bon Iver, photographed by Annie Leibovitz for Vanity Fair and made an honorary member of the Trinity College Literary Society. âI feel really lucky in the sense that the music I make has its own climate or landscape,â says Fionn.Â
Co-produced with Ian Grimble, O Avalanche steers Reganâs off-the-main-drag feel for climate and landscape towards another creative peak, forging a record to lose yourself in. âItâs like youâre looking into this world where thereâs a depth of field, itâs summer, and youâre floating into and out of it,â he says of the album. âThe songs can come together in the moment, so itâs not a conscious thing, but when I listen to the record it feels like thereâs an eternal optimism about it â a kind of upward-feeling energy.â With the gentlest of touches, O Avalanche will sweep you off your feet.Â
Â
Original: $44.00
-70%$44.00
$13.20More Images




O Avalanche
Fionn Reganâs 2024 album O Avalanche, available on vinyl for the first time.Â
"I float sometimes when youâre around,â sings Irish singer-songwriter Fionn Regan on âIslandsâ, setting the weightlessly romantic tenor for his seventh album. Written in Spain, O Avalanche is an album of levitating intimacies, abstract and intuitive yet infused with a tangible sense of the elevating ties between environment and emotion. Between its sun-dappled backdrops and lambent arrangements, the result is a set of sublime songs and something more: itâs a record to float with, immersive, uplifting and transporting.Â
His first since 2019âs beautiful Cala, itâs also an album that is, in Fionnâs words, âvery much on a levelâ â shimmering with poetic mystery and bolstered by a sustained feel for atmosphere and shape. As Fionn explains, âI see it sort of like a film that starts cinematically and develops in abstract ways. It moves in different sequences, backwards and forwards. And if youâre thinking about it in a visual way, thereâs a quality about it where itâs always magic hour.âÂ
Rippling like the sea, âIslandsâ sets that magic-hour mood, using images of the sun and moonlit dances on Spanish sand to set a dreamy scene. Buoyant and urgent, the song introduces the recordâs world with a kind of classicist immediacy; it seems to arrive fully formed, as if the space it evokes is eternal. âWhen I wrote that song it was like there was something cosmic about it, because it doesnât sound like my other songs,â says Fionn. âI felt like it was almost a gift from The Beatles or whatever wellspring they drew on. I remember being in Mallorca and thinking, âWere The Beatles ever here?â Not that Iâm saying itâs on their level but it has some sort of cosmic flow to it.âÂ
That flow leads to Valencia for the luminous âTeix Mountainâ, which evokes the off-piste mountain spirit of its title and the album as a whole. Its rarefied sense of romanticism also extends to the title track, where Fionnâs long-standing friend Anna Friel provides subtle, beautiful backing vocals for an almost hallucinatory hymn to companionship. Braided with haunting references to storms and âsummer ghostsâ, itâs a song lit with inner faith, breaking out in the declaration, âI believe thereâs a light that brings good souls together.â âA lot of my writing has a kind of abstract-expressionistic way of falling together and assembling itself,â says Fionn, âbut I also love it when something is simple and timeless â where it just bursts into something else.âÂ
Good souls duly unite beneath a stormy and star-lit sky in the gorgeous reverie of âBlood Is Thicker Than Wineâ, a song bursting with impressionistic detail. âThat song has an instant visual thing about it to me,â says Fionn, a description borne out by lyrics of such evocative power, you can picture the scene immediately: two lovers under the moon, laughing and lit by lightning. âAnja IIâ unspools with a similar scene-setting clarity, telling a story in increments â âScene change/Spotlights onâ â and providing an epic shift for the recordâs sure sense of structure. Â
From here, O Avalanche moves from a sense of loved-up drift to a state of serene, unforced resolve. âWritten in a dream,â says Fionn, âFarewellâ is a tenderly up-tempo take on partings, sorrowed yet beautifully becalmed in its looping arrangement. âInto the Light of the Sunâ has a feeling of resolution about it, unfurling âlike a burst of energy,â says Fionn. âHeadphonesâ is a near-hymnal beauty, Reganâs beatific vocals referencing fleeting moments half-remembered over mellifluous ripples of glinting guitar. The albumâs rhyming motifs of oceans, sunlight, waves, tsunamis and names written on skin seem to coalesce here, like snapshots stored for reminiscence. Finally, closer âDeiĂ Song/Llucalcariâ resembles a soft, supple awakening from a dream of summer, eyes wide open in readiness for new horizons.Â
âI feel like the album has got quite a lot of bottled-summer energy running through it,â says Fionn. It took him two or three albumsâ worth of material to find the songs that felt simpatico â the ones that âstarted to hang out together and fought their way to becoming the albumâ. Capturing the mood, Fionn wrote the record while staying in Majorca, a place he describes as his âtrue northâ: âThereâs a sense of an artistic energy there, where you step back a little from the main drag of bigger cities. Youâre sat there in the mountains looking towards the cities, rather than the other way. Thereâs a kind of focus, a feeling that youâre tuned in to something.âÂ
Regan has fine-tuned a sensibility of his own since the acoustic poetry of his debut, 2006âs acclaimed The End of History. Since then, he has travelled between band-based detours and the gleaming likes of 2011âs 100 Acres of Sycamore, whose worry-worn beauty âDogwood Blossomâ drew new audiences when it found kindred spirits in two TV shows, romantic lockdown hit Normal People and Shane Meadowsâs This Is England. Oscar-winning actor Cillian Murphy featured in the video for 2017âs âThe Meetings of the Watersâ, while elsewhere Regan has been nominated for Mercury, Choice, Meteor Ireland and Shortlist awards, sampled by Bon Iver, photographed by Annie Leibovitz for Vanity Fair and made an honorary member of the Trinity College Literary Society. âI feel really lucky in the sense that the music I make has its own climate or landscape,â says Fionn.Â
Co-produced with Ian Grimble, O Avalanche steers Reganâs off-the-main-drag feel for climate and landscape towards another creative peak, forging a record to lose yourself in. âItâs like youâre looking into this world where thereâs a depth of field, itâs summer, and youâre floating into and out of it,â he says of the album. âThe songs can come together in the moment, so itâs not a conscious thing, but when I listen to the record it feels like thereâs an eternal optimism about it â a kind of upward-feeling energy.â With the gentlest of touches, O Avalanche will sweep you off your feet.Â
Â
Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
Fionn Reganâs 2024 album O Avalanche, available on vinyl for the first time.Â
"I float sometimes when youâre around,â sings Irish singer-songwriter Fionn Regan on âIslandsâ, setting the weightlessly romantic tenor for his seventh album. Written in Spain, O Avalanche is an album of levitating intimacies, abstract and intuitive yet infused with a tangible sense of the elevating ties between environment and emotion. Between its sun-dappled backdrops and lambent arrangements, the result is a set of sublime songs and something more: itâs a record to float with, immersive, uplifting and transporting.Â
His first since 2019âs beautiful Cala, itâs also an album that is, in Fionnâs words, âvery much on a levelâ â shimmering with poetic mystery and bolstered by a sustained feel for atmosphere and shape. As Fionn explains, âI see it sort of like a film that starts cinematically and develops in abstract ways. It moves in different sequences, backwards and forwards. And if youâre thinking about it in a visual way, thereâs a quality about it where itâs always magic hour.âÂ
Rippling like the sea, âIslandsâ sets that magic-hour mood, using images of the sun and moonlit dances on Spanish sand to set a dreamy scene. Buoyant and urgent, the song introduces the recordâs world with a kind of classicist immediacy; it seems to arrive fully formed, as if the space it evokes is eternal. âWhen I wrote that song it was like there was something cosmic about it, because it doesnât sound like my other songs,â says Fionn. âI felt like it was almost a gift from The Beatles or whatever wellspring they drew on. I remember being in Mallorca and thinking, âWere The Beatles ever here?â Not that Iâm saying itâs on their level but it has some sort of cosmic flow to it.âÂ
That flow leads to Valencia for the luminous âTeix Mountainâ, which evokes the off-piste mountain spirit of its title and the album as a whole. Its rarefied sense of romanticism also extends to the title track, where Fionnâs long-standing friend Anna Friel provides subtle, beautiful backing vocals for an almost hallucinatory hymn to companionship. Braided with haunting references to storms and âsummer ghostsâ, itâs a song lit with inner faith, breaking out in the declaration, âI believe thereâs a light that brings good souls together.â âA lot of my writing has a kind of abstract-expressionistic way of falling together and assembling itself,â says Fionn, âbut I also love it when something is simple and timeless â where it just bursts into something else.âÂ
Good souls duly unite beneath a stormy and star-lit sky in the gorgeous reverie of âBlood Is Thicker Than Wineâ, a song bursting with impressionistic detail. âThat song has an instant visual thing about it to me,â says Fionn, a description borne out by lyrics of such evocative power, you can picture the scene immediately: two lovers under the moon, laughing and lit by lightning. âAnja IIâ unspools with a similar scene-setting clarity, telling a story in increments â âScene change/Spotlights onâ â and providing an epic shift for the recordâs sure sense of structure. Â
From here, O Avalanche moves from a sense of loved-up drift to a state of serene, unforced resolve. âWritten in a dream,â says Fionn, âFarewellâ is a tenderly up-tempo take on partings, sorrowed yet beautifully becalmed in its looping arrangement. âInto the Light of the Sunâ has a feeling of resolution about it, unfurling âlike a burst of energy,â says Fionn. âHeadphonesâ is a near-hymnal beauty, Reganâs beatific vocals referencing fleeting moments half-remembered over mellifluous ripples of glinting guitar. The albumâs rhyming motifs of oceans, sunlight, waves, tsunamis and names written on skin seem to coalesce here, like snapshots stored for reminiscence. Finally, closer âDeiĂ Song/Llucalcariâ resembles a soft, supple awakening from a dream of summer, eyes wide open in readiness for new horizons.Â
âI feel like the album has got quite a lot of bottled-summer energy running through it,â says Fionn. It took him two or three albumsâ worth of material to find the songs that felt simpatico â the ones that âstarted to hang out together and fought their way to becoming the albumâ. Capturing the mood, Fionn wrote the record while staying in Majorca, a place he describes as his âtrue northâ: âThereâs a sense of an artistic energy there, where you step back a little from the main drag of bigger cities. Youâre sat there in the mountains looking towards the cities, rather than the other way. Thereâs a kind of focus, a feeling that youâre tuned in to something.âÂ
Regan has fine-tuned a sensibility of his own since the acoustic poetry of his debut, 2006âs acclaimed The End of History. Since then, he has travelled between band-based detours and the gleaming likes of 2011âs 100 Acres of Sycamore, whose worry-worn beauty âDogwood Blossomâ drew new audiences when it found kindred spirits in two TV shows, romantic lockdown hit Normal People and Shane Meadowsâs This Is England. Oscar-winning actor Cillian Murphy featured in the video for 2017âs âThe Meetings of the Watersâ, while elsewhere Regan has been nominated for Mercury, Choice, Meteor Ireland and Shortlist awards, sampled by Bon Iver, photographed by Annie Leibovitz for Vanity Fair and made an honorary member of the Trinity College Literary Society. âI feel really lucky in the sense that the music I make has its own climate or landscape,â says Fionn.Â
Co-produced with Ian Grimble, O Avalanche steers Reganâs off-the-main-drag feel for climate and landscape towards another creative peak, forging a record to lose yourself in. âItâs like youâre looking into this world where thereâs a depth of field, itâs summer, and youâre floating into and out of it,â he says of the album. âThe songs can come together in the moment, so itâs not a conscious thing, but when I listen to the record it feels like thereâs an eternal optimism about it â a kind of upward-feeling energy.â With the gentlest of touches, O Avalanche will sweep you off your feet.Â
Â











