SKULLCRUSHER
SHARES NEW SINGLE ‘DRAGON’
NEW ALBUM AND YOUR SONG IS LIKE A CIRCLE OUT 17THOCTOBER VIA DIRTY HIT
ANNOUNCES NYC SHOW AT NIGHT CLUB 101 ON 6TH OCTOBER
Skullcrusher Press Photo by Adam Alonzo
Early Praise for Skullcrusher
“On her intimate second album, And Your Song Is Like a Circle, the New York artist conjures a heavy sense of desolation by exploring life’s circular journeys, dreamlike states, and the imprints we leave behind… Electronic beats harmonise with skeletal, finger-picked guitar and austere piano to establish a contrast between human and machine, real versus synthesised.” – CRACK Magazine
“insanely beautiful” – NPR ‘Most Anticipated Fall 2025 Albums’
“Blending misty ambience with introspective folk songwriting. Ballentine wrings poignancy out of simple moments” – Pitchfork
“Ballentine’s skill as a songwriter is adding gravitas to the most conceptual of ideas or, as she does on the album’s meta first single “Exhale,” pull into focus the act of writing a song in the first place.” – The FADER
“Gorgeously gauzy alt folk paens” – The Guardian
“Magical” – Stereogum
“Rarely does an artist arise with a sense of identity so fully composed, but Skullcrusher is clearly resolute in her vision” – The Line of Best Fit
“establishes Ballentine as a clear-eyed truth-teller” – NME
“crisper and more polished, while still retaining the intimate quality of her previous releases. Here, she trades her spectral instrumentations for a poppier, trip-hop-inspired sound, one that marries Dido and Grouper” – Paste
Skullcrusher recently announced her highly anticipated new album, And Your Song is Like a Circle, due out 17thOctober via her new label home Dirty Hit. Today, Helen Ballentine has shared the album’s third single ‘Dragon,’ a gorgeous, murky pop song that lets piano echo over tight, gritted percussion. Alongside the single, she’s announced an intimate show at New York’s Night Club 101 on 6th October. Tickets will be available from 10am local time on Friday 12thSeptember via https://www.skullcrusher.
Of the new single, Ballentine shares: “I wrote Dragon while thinking about dissociation and how it can feel to be brought back to the ground from this state. Like in ‘Spirited Away’ when Chihiro begins to disappear in the spirit world she touches Haku’s hand, which pulls her back but then she can’t move her legs. It is a heavy thing to feel the weight of living and pull yourself back to earth. I was interested in the idea of this being a heavy burden but also a necessary aspect of living. It is hopeful but scary as well. Similar to the way armor is a protection but also a burden, either physically or mentally. It’s difficult to protect yourself.”
Recorded over a period of years following the release of her celebrated 2022 debut, Quiet the Room, And Your Song is Like a Circle does not capture experience – it gestures toward the imprint of an experience that is uncapturable. Swaying between elegant folk and crystalline electronics, landing somewhere in the snowfields shared by Grouper and Julia Holter, Circle probes the ways that grief turns itself inside out. Loss itself becomes as real and substantial as what’s been lost.
Ballentine began writing Circle after leaving Los Angeles, a city she’d called home for nearly a decade. She ended up returning upstate to New York’s Hudson Valley, where she was born and raised. Several years of intense isolation followed, and Ballentine immersed herself in films, books, and art that reflected the rupture of relocating cross-country and its dissociative aftershocks. If Skullcrusher’s first album rendered the detailed intimacies of domestic space, Circlefinds itself vaporized across the landscape: swirling, drifting, searching. It skirts an event horizon in long, slow strokes.
Lead single ‘Exhale’ is built around gorgeous vocal filigrees that fan out into a haze of synthesizers and strings. Watch the video for ‘Exhale’ below, which was conceptualised by Ballentine in collaboration with director Adam Alonzo and shot in Upstate New York in and around her mother’s house. Opening track and previous single ‘March,’ is a stark piano reverie laced with flickering electronics and ambient layers. Watch an intimate, stripped back performance of the heartwrenching song HERE.
Read more about the record in Ballentine’s profile with The FADER, who said her “skill as a songwriter is adding gravitas to the most conceptual of ideas or, as she does on the album’s meta first single “Exhale,” pull into focus the act of writing a song in the first place.”
WATCH OFFICIAL VIDEO FOR ‘EXHALE’ & LIVE PERFORMANCE OF ‘MARCH’
Lyrics came into shape while doing dishes. She painted her kitchen cabinets. The months grew long. One summer, a moth infestation across Hudson kept her from leaving her building. Moths swarmed outside, and crept into her apartment. She shooed them out of her bedroom for the night. When she woke up, they were all dead. She watched a lot of movies to fill the days. “I had a really visceral experience watching David Lynch’s Inland Empire for the first time,” she says. “At the climax, I literally fell out of my chair crying. I zoomed out and saw myself from above.”
At first, she wasn’t sure the music she was composing would cohere into an LP. While making the album, Ballentine focused deeply on the evaporative nature of creative work: the way ideas can appear and dissipate, leaving only faint traces behind, the way a voice courses through a fragile point in time, the way meaning can flicker and falter between people trying their best to understand each other. She recorded at home and in friends’ studios, working alongside apob (Dora Jar, Deb Never) in Los Angeles and co-producer Isaac Eiger (The Dare, Frost Children, Cassandra Jenkins, Malice K) in New York.
While recording, Ballentine experimented with new ways of capturing her voice, such as singing with contact microphones attached to her throat, “creating these really scary sounds.” Throughout the record, the line between human and machine blurs. “The voice is my favorite instrument because everybody has it,” she adds. “It’s related to so many different kinds of sounds: crying, screaming, laughing. And it’s ephemeral. It’s going to eventually die.”
And Your Song is Like a Circle Album Art
Tracklist:
01 March
02 Dragon
03 Living
04 Maelstrom
05 Changes
06 Periphery
07 Red Car
08 Exhale
09 Vessel
10 The Emptying
Some experiences never spit back what they devour. They are too dense; they wield too much gravity. The closer you get to the nucleus, the more you deform. “That kind of journey can be metaphorically applied to so many different things. It could be trying to find yourself, figure out who you really are, figure out what you believe in,” says Ballentine. “As you are journeying within the labyrinth, you have to take on a different form in order to bear witness to the energy inside. You have to become this other being in order to experience something new, and then return to yourself, or get stuck.”
“I like thinking about my work as a collection, and every time I add more to it, I’m adding a rock,” Ballentine says. “Eventually it might form a circle. Each time I make something, I’m putting another line around the body of work. It feels like I’ll be trying to trace it for my whole life.”
Imagine a hand steering a pencil around an empty space. The lines left in the graphite’s wake are not quite round, but they scratch at the idea of a perfect circle. This sketch wobbles, nearing the axis and then drifting from it. A circle’s ghost lifts from the scrawl all the same: The shape emerges from the failure to capture it. And Your Song is Like a Circle curves across that evocative failure, vibrating with the fervency of the attempt.
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