
Open The Door: CD
Open the Door is the debut album from London songwriter Tilly Scantlebury (they/them) as Lazy Day. Bold and bright indie rock with a canny ear for a hook - the project, now ten years old, feels as though it reaches full fruition here. In the process, it marks Scantlebury out as a fresh, singular voice and a real one to watch.
It follows EPs including 2017âs Ribbons and 2019âs Letters - early releases that saw them heralded by critics as âA lo-fi dream pop force to be reckoned withâ (Under the Radar) and âcombining the introspection of Elliott Smith, the reverb-drenched resonance of Slowdive and the wonky pop sensibility of Kate Bushâ (Noisey). Their first studio album remains dazzlingly Lazy Day, with the volume and saturation turned all the way up.Â
Initially written and demoed in Scantleburyâs home studio, Open the Door was made in bursts throughout 2021 and into the beginning of 2022, at The Institute of Sonic Architecture in west Wales, co-produced with Gethin Pearson (Kele Okereke, Charli xcx, Whenyoung). While most of the instrumentation is handled by Scantlebury, drums across the record were performed by Dave Newington of Boy Azooga, with rotating Lazy Day cast members including bassist Kris Lavin and former drummer Beni Evans also appearing. The only voice other than Scantleburyâs on the album, however, is their wife Elâs â on recent single âBright Yellowâ, described as âa riveting pop statementâ (Clash) and âa perfect summer anthemâ (The Telegraph).
Newly married, out as non-binary, and with a completed PhD under their belt, Open the Door finds them occupying their queerness and its constant evolution (questions are posed, answered, left open; âIâ and âyouâ mean something slightly different on each song), and finding validation in that. They are happiest in the domestic (as we hear on upcoming single âSquirmâ), exploring all the corners of their identity, from masculinity to their Jewishness (recent single âKillerâ; âAll The Things That I Loveâ), and keen to steer the ship, by motivating their loved ones and listeners alike (as on âStrangest Relief,â when they sing: âTake the good when itâs found / I just want you around / Getting strongerâ).Â
In the end, the message is clear. Step into the world. Open the door.Â
Tracklist:
1. Killer
2. Getting Good
3. Squirm
4. Strangest Relief
5. Bright Yellow
6. Concrete
7. Falling Behind
8. Alright
9. Joke
10. Not Now
11. All The Things That I Love
Open the Door is the debut album from London songwriter Tilly Scantlebury (they/them) as Lazy Day. Bold and bright indie rock with a canny ear for a hook - the project, now ten years old, feels as though it reaches full fruition here. In the process, it marks Scantlebury out as a fresh, singular voice and a real one to watch.
It follows EPs including 2017âs Ribbons and 2019âs Letters - early releases that saw them heralded by critics as âA lo-fi dream pop force to be reckoned withâ (Under the Radar) and âcombining the introspection of Elliott Smith, the reverb-drenched resonance of Slowdive and the wonky pop sensibility of Kate Bushâ (Noisey). Their first studio album remains dazzlingly Lazy Day, with the volume and saturation turned all the way up.Â
Initially written and demoed in Scantleburyâs home studio, Open the Door was made in bursts throughout 2021 and into the beginning of 2022, at The Institute of Sonic Architecture in west Wales, co-produced with Gethin Pearson (Kele Okereke, Charli xcx, Whenyoung). While most of the instrumentation is handled by Scantlebury, drums across the record were performed by Dave Newington of Boy Azooga, with rotating Lazy Day cast members including bassist Kris Lavin and former drummer Beni Evans also appearing. The only voice other than Scantleburyâs on the album, however, is their wife Elâs â on recent single âBright Yellowâ, described as âa riveting pop statementâ (Clash) and âa perfect summer anthemâ (The Telegraph).
Newly married, out as non-binary, and with a completed PhD under their belt, Open the Door finds them occupying their queerness and its constant evolution (questions are posed, answered, left open; âIâ and âyouâ mean something slightly different on each song), and finding validation in that. They are happiest in the domestic (as we hear on upcoming single âSquirmâ), exploring all the corners of their identity, from masculinity to their Jewishness (recent single âKillerâ; âAll The Things That I Loveâ), and keen to steer the ship, by motivating their loved ones and listeners alike (as on âStrangest Relief,â when they sing: âTake the good when itâs found / I just want you around / Getting strongerâ).Â
In the end, the message is clear. Step into the world. Open the door.Â
Tracklist:
1. Killer
2. Getting Good
3. Squirm
4. Strangest Relief
5. Bright Yellow
6. Concrete
7. Falling Behind
8. Alright
9. Joke
10. Not Now
11. All The Things That I Love
Description
Open the Door is the debut album from London songwriter Tilly Scantlebury (they/them) as Lazy Day. Bold and bright indie rock with a canny ear for a hook - the project, now ten years old, feels as though it reaches full fruition here. In the process, it marks Scantlebury out as a fresh, singular voice and a real one to watch.
It follows EPs including 2017âs Ribbons and 2019âs Letters - early releases that saw them heralded by critics as âA lo-fi dream pop force to be reckoned withâ (Under the Radar) and âcombining the introspection of Elliott Smith, the reverb-drenched resonance of Slowdive and the wonky pop sensibility of Kate Bushâ (Noisey). Their first studio album remains dazzlingly Lazy Day, with the volume and saturation turned all the way up.Â
Initially written and demoed in Scantleburyâs home studio, Open the Door was made in bursts throughout 2021 and into the beginning of 2022, at The Institute of Sonic Architecture in west Wales, co-produced with Gethin Pearson (Kele Okereke, Charli xcx, Whenyoung). While most of the instrumentation is handled by Scantlebury, drums across the record were performed by Dave Newington of Boy Azooga, with rotating Lazy Day cast members including bassist Kris Lavin and former drummer Beni Evans also appearing. The only voice other than Scantleburyâs on the album, however, is their wife Elâs â on recent single âBright Yellowâ, described as âa riveting pop statementâ (Clash) and âa perfect summer anthemâ (The Telegraph).
Newly married, out as non-binary, and with a completed PhD under their belt, Open the Door finds them occupying their queerness and its constant evolution (questions are posed, answered, left open; âIâ and âyouâ mean something slightly different on each song), and finding validation in that. They are happiest in the domestic (as we hear on upcoming single âSquirmâ), exploring all the corners of their identity, from masculinity to their Jewishness (recent single âKillerâ; âAll The Things That I Loveâ), and keen to steer the ship, by motivating their loved ones and listeners alike (as on âStrangest Relief,â when they sing: âTake the good when itâs found / I just want you around / Getting strongerâ).Â
In the end, the message is clear. Step into the world. Open the door.Â
Tracklist:
1. Killer
2. Getting Good
3. Squirm
4. Strangest Relief
5. Bright Yellow
6. Concrete
7. Falling Behind
8. Alright
9. Joke
10. Not Now
11. All The Things That I Love













