Leah Senior -
Pt. Roadknight
Leah Senior wrote the songs on Pt. Roadknight while she was living in a sandstone beach shack down a red dirt road in regional seaside village Anglesea in Victoria. In the summer the coastal town teemed with tourists on holiday, but in the winter it could feel deserted and grey. Both elements show up on the record. At times overcast and moody, at others frolicking and playful, the record narrates the seasons of the year within this season of Senior’s life, with all its tensions and contradictions: Breaking away from the city lent her artistic freedom, though she missed her vibrant creative community in Melbourne; she found peace in the deserted beachtown while bemoaning the clear wealth disparity visible in all the giant beachhouses left empty in the midst of a housing crisis. Grounding her throughout were the stunning natural surroundings and the hope implicit in the changing of the seasons, echoed in songs like “Blossoms of Spring,” the solstice song “Seasonal Rhyme,” and “Lovelily,” which she wrote while watching dragonflies dancing across the pond on cult folk hero Howard Eynon’s Tasmanian property.
The spirited lead single “Mothersong” kicks the album off on a high note, with Pentangle-esque guitar riffs, flute fanfares, and evocative blood harmony between Leah and her sister Andi Senior. Leah and her longtime musical collaborator Jesse Williams wrote the song to ease a friend’s anxiety as she transitioned into motherhood. Musically the duo set out to create a timeless and rollicking folk rock anthem they might play in 40 years as the long-time resident psych folk band at a local seaside festival. Both intentions come through in the song’s music video, which finds Leah and her bandmates in Victorian nursery attire, playfully engaging in a mother’s Blessingway ritual complete with giant puppets and Jodorowsky references.
On “Softly, Once Again,” with its Beatles-inspired pop inflections, Senior gives herself permission to approach her music on her own terms (while cheekily commenting on the oversaturation of punk music in Melbourne): So many punk bands in this town / So little said, for all that sound / Should I hitch my wagon to the band / And shout it out as loud as I can / Or play it softly once again. A microcosm of the album’s overarching theme, she’s grappling here with the balance between contemplative creative space and extroverted public output.
Leah wrote the third single “Two Weeks” after her neighbors tore down the quaint beach house next door and built in its place a towering grey monstrosity they rarely visited. Reminiscent of the sparse laments of Nick Drake, she sings over fingerpicked guitar and subtle piano, Everybody wants their block of land / Something in the city, something by the seaside / One day we’ll be asked to move along / Nothing lasts forever unless you put it in a song.
With its strong sense of place and ebbs and flows of mood that mimic the seasonal shifts of nature along the limestone coast, Pt. Roadknight turns its introspection outwards, sharing it with the listeners. Like the songs “Mothersong,” “Zoë,” and “Part of the Crowd”—each a love letter written to friends and experiences back in the city, Leah’s fifth studio album has an epistolary quality, its pensive, solitary tendencies are transformed into a resonant point of connection. As she sings on “Talk To Me,” (a nod to Joni Mitchell’s song of the same name), it’s a fine line between focus and retreat.
“[Leah Senior’s] fifth album, Pt. Roadknight, while unmistakably more refined, hints at a full-circle moment for the singer. There’s a clear affection for confessional folk here, her phrasing often recalling Laurel Canyon-era singer-songwriters.”
Pt. Roadknight Tracklist:
Side A
Mothersong
Softly, Once Again
Talk To Me
Winter
Two Weeks
Seasonal Rhyme
Side B
People Pleaser
Part of the Crowd
Zoë
Blossoms of Spring
Child
Lovelily
All songs on Pt. Roadknight written by Leah Senior except “Mothersong,” “Winter,” “Part of the Crowd,” and “Child” written by Leah Senior and Jesse Williams. Vocals, acoustic guitar, piano, string arrangements, autoharp, tambourine, and midi instruments by Leah Senior. Acoustic and electric guitar, piano, Rhodes, synthesizer, percussion, midi instruments and harmonica by Jesse Williams. Backing vocals by Andi Senior. Bass guitar and vocals by Jack Robbins. Drums, percussion, and vocals by Luke Brennan. Flute by Hank Clifton-Williamson. Flugelhorn by Liam McGorry. Violin by Madeleine Jevons and Jessie May Wright. Violin on “People Pleaser” by Lily Tait. Recorded and Mixed by Jesse Williams except “Two Weeks” which was recorded by Glenn Van Dyke. Mastered by Casey Hartnett. Cover photo by Jamie Wdziekonski and album art by Ashley Goodall.
Leah Senior’s Pt. Roadknight is a joint release of feminist record label SPINSTER (North America and UK) and Third Eye Stimuli (ROW).
“Senior’s works have always teetered between baroque impulses and austere atmospheres. With her band behind her, songs lounge in her loving ornamentation, but I’ve seen her captivate a room with just guitar and voice, bittersweet cocoons that cradle the listener in reverberating air.”