THE EDITED PRESS RELEASE: “On Emita Ox, New York City’s Hello Mary — the trio of Helena Straight, Stella Wave and Mikaela Oppenheimer — unleash emotions through alt-rock anthems like flaming weapons, wielding them like proud trophies of their collective strength.
Hello Mary have spent the last several years refining their intricate alt-rock sound and musicianship. The culmination of this work — done in the studio, at practice and on the road — is reflected on Emita Ox, the followup to their acclaimed 2023 self-titled LP. On Emita Ox, Hello Mary push harder into heavy distortion and psychedelic dreamscapes, as they build out their singular universe of gutsy strain of rock. The LP’s labyrinthine production reflects how the band’s musical tastes have expanded from Elliott Smith and Radiohead to encompass experimental post-rock acts like Black Midi and Swans. “This album encompasses a lot of our inspirations,” says Oppenheimer. “It also shows what we’re like as a trio, collectively.”
The project reveals the band leveling up as musicians and composers. The trio played all the instruments on Emita Ox and produced it alongside Alex Farrar (Indigo De Souza, Wednesday, Snail Mail). The members’ contributions to the songwriting and production bleed into each other, but the album is a showcase of their individual strengths: Straight’s ethereal vocal melodies and gritty guitar riffs, Wave’s emotive vocals and knotty drum patterns, and Oppenheimer’s diabolical basslines and experimentation with electronic production. “We map out all the sections beforehand, we like to write intricate parts that complement each other,” says Wave.
Featuring songs that span from 2018 to 2023, Emita Ox is also a document of Hello Mary’s past five years together growing up as bandmates and their arrival into young adulthood. First meeting as teenagers in 2019, the band became fast friends through the pandemic — a global crisis that made coming of age feel even more weighty and complicated.
“This album represents a period of time that’s very meaningful to us. The songs are related to things that we all know about, even if it’s not out on the table for everyone else,” Wave explains. “The songwriting and recording process was a very heavy time that I will never forget.” Even if the lyrics touch on serious topics, the band maintain a core sense of play and exploration: Jamming is their way of working through these feelings in a way that’s “easy and fun,” Straight says.
Created amid these emotions of frustration and camaraderie, Emita Ox sees Hello Mary diving into a thrilling sound of catharsis. On 0%,’Wave launches into piercing screams for the first time. Oppenheimer says that her bandmate’s intense shrieks “makes the song full of energy and really exciting to play,” especially in the song’s breakdown which ends in a cacophony of noise and vibraphone. Meanwhile, Down My Life, which Straight says she wrote after “one of the saddest experiences” of her life, features her angelic vowels on top of warped piano and menacing bass. The band even veers towards prog-rock on songs like ‘Footstep Misstep,’ where complex instrumentation and Wave’s dynamic vocals evoke a world in between fantasy and nightmare.
The LP’s title is referenced in Three, whose lyrics sound plucked from a fairy tale. “Three was written after I’d been in a creative rut that lasted a couple months,” says Straight. “I wasn’t focused on getting any message across. My intention was just to write a full song, whether I ended up liking it or not.” Though it doesn’t have an intended meaning, the imagery of the girl Emita and her ox is fitting for the band: Oxes are strong and resilient, and much of Emita Ox’s subject matter reveals Hello Mary’s perseverance, as they choose to move through life’s burdens instead of getting beaten down by them.
But oxen are also dependable — much like how they see each other and their relationship. “There’s the lyric that goes, ‘Woke to the hands of three / Stitching and fixing me,’ ” Wave says to Straight, quoting her own words back to her. “I always picture me and Mikaela with you.” It’s a testament to how they’ve witnessed each other’s heartaches and mended each other back up — through their music and their friendship.”