AA WILLIAMS
ELEANOR GOODMAN
Forever Blue BELLA UNION
London singer-songwriter makes impressive, depressive debut.
It’s easy to see why AA Williams has called her debut album Forever Blue. It’s a melancholic set of songs, building on the vulnerable mood of last year’s self-titled EP, and would feel relentless in its assault of misery if it wasn’t for her languid vocal style and nuanced dynamics. Singing from the same soulful hymn sheet as the likes of Chelsea Wolfe and Emma Ruth Rundle, the London-based singer-songwriter cuts open her heart, and it’s filled with darkness.