The Little Unsaid
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The Little Unsaid | |
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Background information | |
Birth name | John Elliott |
Born | Dewsbury | September 7, 1987
Origin | West Yorkshire |
Genres |
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Occupation(s) | Singer-songwriter, arranger, producer, multi-instrumentalist |
Years active | 2010 - present |
Labels |
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Website | thelittleunsaid |
John Elliott, known by his stage and recording name The Little Unsaid, is an English songwriter, producer and multi-instrumentalist. He has released five studio albums and one EP of songs combining elements of alt-folk, electronica, alt-rock and string arrangements.
In September 2015 a crowd-funding campaign was completed using Pledge Music to finance the recording and release of the album Fisher King.[1] The album was recorded in various locations in London, and was mixed by Graeme Stewart, producer of Jonny Greenwood's solo work and film music.[2] The leading single from the album 'Can We Hear It?' was mixed by Mark Gardener of the shoegaze band Ride, during breaks from the band's 2015 world tour.[2]
Elliott and his band released their fourth album Imagined Hymns & Chaingang Mantras in April 2017.[3] Following the release, The Little Unsaid won the Steve Reid InNOVAtion Award,[4] and subsequently signed with Reveal Records to release a compilation album of material spanning the band's career to date entitled Selected Works.[5]
In May 2019 The Little Unsaid released their fifth studio album Atomise on Reveal Records.[6][7]
Discography[]
- Someone Else's Lullabies - Spare Dougal Records (2010)
- Dig for the Promise - Carbon Moon Records (2013)
- Dig for the Promise (Acoustic) - Carbon Moon Records (2013)
- A Filthy Hunger EP - Carbon Moon Records (2014)
- Electronic Sketches - Carbon Moon Records (2014)
- Fisher King - Carbon Moon Records (2016)
- Turn This World Into A Home - EP (2017)
- Imagined Hymns and Chaingang Mantras - Carbon Moon Records (April 2017)
- Selected Works - Reveal Records (2018)
- Atomise - Reveal Records (May 2019)
- Music & Nature - Reveal Records ( November 2019)
- Lick the Future's Lips - Reveal Records ( July 2021)
References[]
- ^ "The Little Unsaid". PledgeMusic. Retrieved 14 September 2015.
- ^ a b "First Listen: The Little Unsaid – Can We Hear It? - Jammerzine". Jammerzine.com. 9 September 2015. Retrieved 14 September 2015.
- ^ "Apr 17 - Imagined Hymns & Chaingang Mantras - The Little Unsaid". Laurel Canyon Music.
- ^ "The Little Unsaid". PRSFoundation.com. Retrieved 12 July 2019.
- ^ Blake, Thomas (May 2, 2018). "The Little Unsaid: Selected Works (Album Review) | Folk Radio". Folkradio.co.uk.
- ^ "The Little Unsaid's Atomise is a stunning interpretation of contemporary chaos". Thelineofbestfit.com.
- ^ Spencer, Neil (May 26, 2019). "The Little Unsaid: Atomise review – bold and different". The Guardian.
External links[]
Media related to John Elliott (musician) at Wikimedia Commons "This is a band at the top of their game and shows their most eclectic mix of sounds to date. For those looking for something completely different"Reviewed By Peter Brockwell. The Midlands Rock. 4 July 2021.
- English male singer-songwriters