Release Date: 16/01/26
Archy Marshall (aka King Krule) presents a newly remastered instrumental edition of A New Place 2 Drown. This atmospheric collection foregrounds submerged beats, woozy textures and richly layered production, offering a fresh perspective on the record’s sonic core. Developed alongside a visual world created with his brother and longtime collaborator Jack Marshall, the project stands as a multidisciplinary love letter to South London. By stripping the songs back to their foundations, these instrumentals highlight intricate textures, rhythmic detail and immersive depth that have helped the album become a cult favourite. Includes instrumental versions of Any God of Yours, Swell, Arise Dear Brother, Ammi Ammi, Buffed Sky, Sex With Nobody, Eye’s Drift, The Sea Liner MK 1, Empty Vessels, New Builds, Dull Boys and Thames Water. As Pitchfork wrote: 'Marshall has made tremendous strides as a producer, gorgeously reproducing the gloom and loneliness of early '90s hip-hop and finding a way to integrate it into his own style.'
Archy Marshall (aka King Krule) presents a newly remastered instrumental edition of A New Place 2 Drown. This atmospheric collection foregrounds submerged beats, woozy textures and richly layered production, offering a fresh perspective on the record’s sonic core. Developed alongside a visual world created with his brother and longtime collaborator Jack Marshall, the project stands as a multidisciplinary love letter to South London. By stripping the songs back to their foundations, these instrumentals highlight intricate textures, rhythmic detail and immersive depth that have helped the album become a cult favourite. Includes instrumental versions of Any God of Yours, Swell, Arise Dear Brother, Ammi Ammi, Buffed Sky, Sex With Nobody, Eye’s Drift, The Sea Liner MK 1, Empty Vessels, New Builds, Dull Boys and Thames Water. As Pitchfork wrote: 'Marshall has made tremendous strides as a producer, gorgeously reproducing the gloom and loneliness of early '90s hip-hop and finding a way to integrate it into his own style.'