One year ago today
The premiere of Seasons, the film about the making of New Season, was exactly one year ago today.
Making this album is probably the thing I’m proudest of in my life. It was a real labour of love and it’s wonderful to have this film to look back on and relive the process.
So check out the trailer above, and when you have an hour to spare, watch the film here.
New Season: free download!
You can download my new album New Season for free/pay-what-you-want throughout November on Bandcamp!
Please reblog this to let the world know (sharing is caring).
Love from Luke
P+M Magazine 09
I’m featured in the new issue of P+M Magazine, a free PDF zine / mp3 compilation, with text in Japanese and English.
The video above is a trailer for the magazine, and you can download it for free here.
すばらしい!
New Season in depth | Part 5: Patience

Every Monday (it kind of all went wrong) for the next six weeks I’m going to be posting an in-depth blog about a song from New Season. Here’s the fifth one.
Part 5: Patience
I am (or at least I used to be) a pretty impatient person. I’m also a bit of a control freak and I like stuff to be done my way. So in 2011 I chose a word to focus on for the year, something to work on in my character, and that was ‘patience,’ hence this song of the same name.
If I’m being honest, this is probably my least favourite song on the album. It’s not that I don’t like it, it’s just that I never felt completely satisfied with how it ended up sounding. I love the chorus and think it has a great melody, which is why I kept the song on the album, and I love the sentiment of the song, but I always worried that it was a bit too basic and pop, and I was never sold on the middle eight (except the killer Beach Boys-esque ‘ba ba ba’ bits from 4:29 onwards!)
That said, the string section on the outro is one of my favourite moments on the album (from 4:55 onwards) and I feel like the song works in the context of the album, in terms of providing a different mood and feel. A few people have since told me that it’s their favourite song on New Season, so it can’t be all bad!
Anyway, I hope it inspires people to be a little more patient and to slow down a bit.
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Listen to / buy ‘New Season’ at lukeleighfield.com/newseason.
Watch ‘Seasons’, the feature-length documentary about the making of the album, at lukeleighfield.com/seasons.
Live im Waschsalon, Wien
Last night I played in a laundrette in Vienna. The audience was kind enough to help out with some backing vocals on ‘Garde Ta Foy.’ Enjoy!
Video by Jimmy.
New Season in depth | Part 4: Whispering

Every Monday (this one is late!) for the next seven weeks I’m going to be posting an in-depth blog about a song from New Season. Here’s the fourth one.
Part 4: Whispering
In spring 2010 I was invited to go on a songwriting retreat for a couple of days by BBC 6 DJ, Tom Robinson. Around ten of us went to a cottage in Kent to just be quiet and write songs for a couple of days, and share them with each other.
In that day and a half I managed to write more songs than I’d written in the previous year (!) and ’Whispering’ was one of them. The song came about from the quietness and peace of the surroundings, and it’s about taking time to be quiet, still and present. There’s not really a huge amount to say about it - it’s all in the lyrics!
When it came to recording the song, it’s pretty exposed lyrically and musically and I wanted to keep that bare intimacy, but we did some cool stuff with the ending to make it a little more exciting. The big sound that comes in at the middle eight, aside from the drums, is a Rhodes piano going through numerous pedals, delays and guitar cabs. Pete geeked out and managed to create an insane sound that I’m sure we’d never be able to replicate again.
The vocal sound at the ending was made by layering loads of parts with me singing super quietly, and the echo part is a choir of my friends that we recorded at a church in Southampton.
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Listen to / buy ‘New Season’ at lukeleighfield.com/newseason.
Watch ‘Seasons’, the feature-length documentary about the making of the album, at lukeleighfield.com/seasons.
New Season in depth | Part 3: It’s You

Every Monday for the next eight weeks I’m going to be posting an in-depth blog about a song from New Season. Here’s the third one.
Part 3: It’s You
‘It’s You’ is in the same key as ‘Have You Got Heart?’, and isn’t a million miles away in terms of tempo and feel, so I had to do something to make sure that it didn’t end up sounding too similar on the record. Whereas ‘Have You Got Heart?’ sounds quite bright and cheery thanks to the high guitar line, we went for some slightly dirge-y Weezer-esque guitars on ‘It’s You’ (listen to the start of ‘Buddy Holly’ or the chorus of ‘The Sweater Song’) to give it a bit of rock weight.
I’ve always felt that the verses are a good car-driving tempo and one of my favourite bits of the song is at 2:06 when the high guitar line comes in. To me, it sounds really American and like you’re driving on a long, open road, probably in a Cadillac through a desert or something. There’s also a killer shaker part at 1:46, which really gels the verse together. Never underestimate the role of a shaker.
My main concern with the chorus was worrying whether the hook was too basic (“It’s youuu, youuu, youuu, you are the one I love” was never going to win any awards for lyric writing). Whist it’s good because it’s super catchy and you can sing it after hearing it once, the danger with those kinds of choruses is that you’re sick of them after hearing them three times (mind, this chorus never gets old). Anyway, I tried to develop the chorus a bit and make it more interesting, but it felt complete as it was and I decided to risk putting an über-pop chorus on the album. Plus, I was super into the Gm7 chord in the chorus (2:40, for example) and there was no way that wasn’t making the album.
Other things I’m into on this track are the thick three-part harmonies at the end of each chorus (2:46 - the low part kills me), the way the drums play through the breaks before the choruses (0:20), the build-up at 3:31, and basically everything from 4:17 onwards (if I ever get to play a stadium show, this bit will be great). Although I do worry that we recorded the whole song too slow and that I didn’t sing the high bits very well. But look, I never claimed to be Freddie Mercury.
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Listen to / buy ‘New Season’ at lukeleighfield.com/newseason.
Watch ‘Seasons’, the feature-length documentary about the making of the album, at lukeleighfield.com/seasons.
Interview with Venture Magazine
Venture Magazine made me their artist of the month and interviewed me about New Season and stuff.
New Season in depth | Part 2: New Season

Every Monday for the next nine weeks I’m going to be posting an in-depth blog about a song from New Season. Here’s the second one.
Part 2: New Season
I love Aaron’s (drums) shout at the start of this song. I think he was shouting because he’d done a fair few takes of this one, or maybe he was just super into it, but either way I decided that keeping the shout would be a good thing. I love songs where you can hear something odd in the recording, like how you can hear a phone go off in the studio at 2:56 in ‘Steven’s Last Night in Town’ by Ben Folds Five, followed by someone laughing in the live room. Those weird things make a record more fun, in my opinion. And on this song, it helps to lift things after the album opener ‘Slow Down’, which I said last week was possibly a bad choice of album opener.
Anyway, ‘New Season’ is obviously the title track, and in some ways encompasses what the whole of the album is about: hope, triumph over adversity, being positive, etc. It’s the oldest song on the album because I released an earlier version of the song, which I recorded for a charity single, back in 2010 (listen here). The original had a bit of a dirty pop-punk vibe and was a bit ropey in parts, although was blessed with some lovely backing vocals from Jose Vanders and Sam Little. For the album version we basically took out the nagging pop-punk guitars, added some rippin’ Hammond organ, introduced a tasty drum beat in the second verse, and made the whole thing a bit more of a rounded, considered, pop-rock anthem.
We also changed the pre-chorus bits so that rather than breaking the momentum of the song, they now added more energy and led into the chorus (check out the killer drum fill at 2:10). The ending was perked up with some rich brass, and my favourite bit of the song is probably the backing vocals in the middle eight. From 2:38 onwards we layered up lots of parts with me singing in a nice girly falsetto, and also added some extra tasty falsetto parts over the “this is a new season” bits (see 2:44). There’s a nice choir moment at 3:20, which I love, and we made poor Ben play his guitar solo over and over until it oozed pure awesome, whereas on the original version I think Ben was still learning it, so it didn’t ROCK quite so much.
The writing of the song itself happened really quickly, which seems to be the case with most of my favourite songs, and I love it because it’s nice and summery, and provides a burst of pop-rock adrenaline to the album.
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Listen to / buy ‘New Season’ at lukeleighfield.com/newseason.
Watch ‘Seasons’, the feature-length documentary about the making of the album, at lukeleighfield.com/seasons.
New Season Reviews & Interviews
Lots of people have been kind enough to review New Season, and rather than post every review individually, which would be terribly boring, I thought it’d be nice to do a Rocky-esque montage (kind of). It seemed a bit misleading to exclude the negative reviews, so you’ll find those below as well.
If you’d rather make up your own mind about New Season then you can listen to it here: lukeleighfield.com/newseason / Bandcamp / SoundCloud / Spotify
And you can buy it here: New Season bundle / deluxe CD / Bandcamp / iTunes / Amazon

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English reviews:
“A solid, well-crafted album with many interesting musical touches throughout” - AAA Music
“New Season is an album of wonderful power-pop joyfulness and if this album does not bring Leighfield the success he deserves then the music industry is broken beyond repair” - All Gigs
“A huge step in the right direction […] the album he’s dreamt of making” (4/5) - Big Cheese
“New Season is the best record of Luke’s career and an early contender for album of the year” (10/10) - Cross Rhythms
“His songs have a richness and a weight to them, almost an air of expectancy […] this album has a lot going for it” - Culture Brats
“Luke is one of the most amazing and underrated artists I’ve come across. The album is a blissful mix of sombre and upbeat tempos” (7.5/10) - Dan Mburu
“A versatile collection of songs” - East Portland Blog
“Large amounts of this album are horribly contrived and unoriginal […] my 11 year old ex-students wrote significantly more novel lyrics than I can find here” - Echoes and Dust
“There is not a weak track on this record […] his most mature release to date” (4/5) - Female First
“This album might just be Luke Leighfield’s defining sound and one that will appeal to a lot of people” - Hevy Petal
“A wonderful pop record for all the family” (7/10) - Hitsville UK
“I’m surprised Chris Martin isn’t suing for copyright infringement” - Is This Music?
“New Season is not over-polished, and that is where the beauty of the songs hides. Luke Leighfield is a talented man, and another great find” (4.5/5) - Louder than the Music
“An excellent pop album bursting with potential house party anthems [with] a depth and sincerity missing in so many other singer-songwriters” - Mujahid Johar
“[New Season] makes for some achingly exquisite listening. A beautiful piece of work. Thought-provoking, creative, insightful and charming. Buy. Now” - My Fizzy Pop!
“For people looking through the sea of music on the Internet, Leighfield and his polished album New Season easily stand out from the rest” - Nerd Life
“An accomplished work […] there’s a lot in this fellow’s future” - Outroversion
“New Season is apparently Leighfield’s fourth studio release, which takes some explaining if the other three are anything like as plodding and earnest” (2/5) - Q
“A treasure trove of earnest lyrics, well-executed arrangements, and light, beautiful melodies” (7.5/10) - Rock Freaks
“This album cries out to be listened to […] a very welcome surprise” - Rock Regeneration
“For piano rock, it’s certainly among the best” - Room Thirteen
“The album would be better as a 5-song EP. While some of the songs are flawless, others just seem like they’re filling up the space” - Snapshot Symphony
“New Season sounds like something you might hear in a school assembly when the teachers are attempting to get “down with the kids”, but all the teachers seem to think that their pupils all think that Starsailor is hardcore and Songs of Praise is a bit edgy” (4/10) - The 405
“While is certainly doesn’t reinvent the wheel with its piano-rock driven sound, [New Season] does showcase Luke’s considerable talents as a songwriter” (6.5/10) - The Music Service
“One of the most pleasant surprises of the year thus far. Leighfield’s musical allure has far-reaching potential. Heartfelt without ever risking being cheesy, New Season is a relatable achievement that offers both emotional depth and ease of listening. Anyone with a heart should take something from this” (4/5) - The Punk Site
“Gentle optimism seeps from the reserved power of the album” (8/10) - Venture
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German reviews:
Album Check (7/10)
CD Bewertungen (7/10)
Dream Out Loud (8.5/12)
Hurricane Bar (12/12)
Scene2Act (5.5/6)
(and one in Italian) Comunicazione Interna
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Interviews about New Season:
In English: FMV Magazine / M Magazine / Spilt inc. / The Music Service
Auf Deutsch: Hurricane Bar
