Home Hear Emma Frank Unveils Her Stylish Interiors

Emma Frank Unveils Her Stylish Interiors

The singer-songwriter takes you into her personal space on her homepun third LP.

Emma Frank welcomes you into her heart and hearth with her lush and sophisticated new album Interiors — showcasing today on Tinnitist.

The Brooklyn-based singer-songwriter’s new nine-song effort departs from her previous, more jazz-adjacent albums and leans into her pop sensibilities, with nods to ’70s singer-songwriters like Judee Sill. Written during pandemic lockdowns, Interiors draws listeners in with intimate arrangements and warm vocals.

“With this album, and the things surrounding it — my space, my life, the artwork, the videos — I tried to make an immersive creative experience for myself,” Frank explains. “Writing happens in my space, and I’m very sensitive to how my space feels, and arranging my space feels like a musical act, one that is happening in conversation with my songwriting. During lockdown I had all this time on my hands and I gave myself the freedom to play. All of the vocals on this record were recorded at my house. A lot of the songs talk about doing chores and decorating, tending to the home, and all of the artwork for the singles are things I made for fun. I don’t necessarily love them, but that’s OK. It was more about giving myself permission to be my imperfect self and still create.

“The album cover is a photo of our dining table in the early morning. I’ve rearranged the room since then and I’m writing new songs but I think there is more of my whole self in this album than anything I’ve made before. That’s really the best I could hope for — to be fully engaged in making the thing and to document the self in this weird, sacred way.”

Originally from Boston, Frank lived in Montreal for nine years of her adult life before moving to New York City. On her last two records, Ocean Av and Come Back, she collaborated with critically acclaimed pianist and composer Aaron Parks and producer Franky Rousseau. The albums explored Frank’s jazz-tinged folk songs, with a light-footed vocal approach complimenting the momentum of Park’s accompaniment.

On Interiors, the approach is significantly poppier, with Frank finding a new groundedness in her approach to creation. The music feels firmly rooted in Americana, with the opening track Keep Moving recalling some of the soulfulness of Bonnie Raitt. Other songs like Bad TV and Current feel almost anthemic, flirting with rockier and electro influences like St. Vincent and Hiatus Kaiyote.

Photo by Alex Duvall.

Seeing Clear is a quieter moment and evokes the winding-narrative folk of Laura Marling. The one cover on the record, Lopin’ Along Through The Cosmos, pays homage to ’70s songwriting icon Sill, and is one of the most profound moments on the record, sung as a duet with Thom Gill, who also plays guitar on the rest of the record.

That ’70s spirit bleeds in throughout, lending a dream-like, almost psychedelic sensibility to an otherwise minimalist approach. Producers and longtime friends, guitarist Rousseau (Chris Thile, Philip Glass, Phoebe Bridgers) and pianist Dominic Mekky (Caroline Shaw, Gabriel Kahane, Sara Bareilles) bring out the magic in these songs, heightening the emotion of each one with intricate arrangements and lush sound design. Rounding out the players are Pedro Barquinha on drums, Matt Rousseau on bass and Steve Raegele on guitar, while saxophonist Charlotte Greve sits in on two tracks.

Listen to Interiors below, watch the video for Bad TV above, and make yourself at home at Emma Frank’s website, Instagram and Facebook.