
Parader
Keaton Henson is shedding the âquiet boyâ persona that has defined much of his career. Embracing the grunge-infused sounds of his youth on new album Parader, the elusive songwriter melds emotional darkness, melancholy, and seething frustration as he reckons with the hauntings of his past: âI was nervous about being too loud, but then it sort of just came out.â
What unravels across Paraderâs 12 tracks is an introspective autopsy of time as it distorts and folds to inhabit the songwriterâs present. âThere are these disjointed snapshots,â he shares, âmemories across time popping up amongst this collection of thoughts about what it feels like to be this age and a musician.âÂ
âParader has legitimate confidence, itâs not me pretending to be anything Iâm not,â Henson admits. âItâs maybe just me accepting that part of me is this. It's louder and it has those bigger, louder, rasher sounds, but not from a performative point of view. Maybe I'm accepting that that is a part of me as well.â As the record closes out, final track âPerformerâ brings us full circle to the question of the albumâs title â the two intrinsically linked. As he sings, âIâll show my scars to you no matter who you are,â Henson acknowledges the emotional pains of being a musician in the public eye, with the relentless march of time a grudging ally in delivering his stories: âI am the parader. The person who parades around showing their wounds for a living.â
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Parader
Keaton Henson is shedding the âquiet boyâ persona that has defined much of his career. Embracing the grunge-infused sounds of his youth on new album Parader, the elusive songwriter melds emotional darkness, melancholy, and seething frustration as he reckons with the hauntings of his past: âI was nervous about being too loud, but then it sort of just came out.â
What unravels across Paraderâs 12 tracks is an introspective autopsy of time as it distorts and folds to inhabit the songwriterâs present. âThere are these disjointed snapshots,â he shares, âmemories across time popping up amongst this collection of thoughts about what it feels like to be this age and a musician.âÂ
âParader has legitimate confidence, itâs not me pretending to be anything Iâm not,â Henson admits. âItâs maybe just me accepting that part of me is this. It's louder and it has those bigger, louder, rasher sounds, but not from a performative point of view. Maybe I'm accepting that that is a part of me as well.â As the record closes out, final track âPerformerâ brings us full circle to the question of the albumâs title â the two intrinsically linked. As he sings, âIâll show my scars to you no matter who you are,â Henson acknowledges the emotional pains of being a musician in the public eye, with the relentless march of time a grudging ally in delivering his stories: âI am the parader. The person who parades around showing their wounds for a living.â
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Keaton Henson is shedding the âquiet boyâ persona that has defined much of his career. Embracing the grunge-infused sounds of his youth on new album Parader, the elusive songwriter melds emotional darkness, melancholy, and seething frustration as he reckons with the hauntings of his past: âI was nervous about being too loud, but then it sort of just came out.â
What unravels across Paraderâs 12 tracks is an introspective autopsy of time as it distorts and folds to inhabit the songwriterâs present. âThere are these disjointed snapshots,â he shares, âmemories across time popping up amongst this collection of thoughts about what it feels like to be this age and a musician.âÂ
âParader has legitimate confidence, itâs not me pretending to be anything Iâm not,â Henson admits. âItâs maybe just me accepting that part of me is this. It's louder and it has those bigger, louder, rasher sounds, but not from a performative point of view. Maybe I'm accepting that that is a part of me as well.â As the record closes out, final track âPerformerâ brings us full circle to the question of the albumâs title â the two intrinsically linked. As he sings, âIâll show my scars to you no matter who you are,â Henson acknowledges the emotional pains of being a musician in the public eye, with the relentless march of time a grudging ally in delivering his stories: âI am the parader. The person who parades around showing their wounds for a living.â











