Mandolin Orange’s (now Watchhouse) music radiates a mysterious warmth - their songs feel like whispered secrets, one hand cupped to your ear.
The North Carolina duo have built a steady and growing fanbase with this kind of intimacy, and on Tides Of A Teardrop it is more potent than ever. By all accounts it is the duo’s fullest, richest, and most personal effort. You can hear the air between them - the taut space of shared understanding, as palpable as a magnetic field, that makes their music sound like two halves of an endlessly completing thought.