From its gorgeous opening image of the self as a blossoming greenhouse plant, the first album of Billie Marten’s twenties leans into, then explodes, every cliché about growing up. Bass and drums give her songs a fuller, looser sound; lyrics celebrate inner strength and her confidence in her northern accent. Marten’s stripped-back early work drew comparisons to Lucy Rose and Nick Drake, and while her voice is as gentle as ever, a wider sonic palette adds both brightness and depth. Where album opener “Garden Of Eden” juxtaposes organic imagery with its chorus of pure sunshine, alt.rocker “Human Replacement”, inspired by the fear associated with walking home alone at night, channels Billie Eilish in its rhythmic menace.