Hollow Hand

The Hope & Ruin, Brighton.

This event is for 18 and over - No refunds will be issued for under 18s.

Collect 2 Nectar points for every £1 you spend with See Tickets via this site.
Ticket type Cost (face value)? Quantity
GENERAL ADMISSION £11.00 (£10.00)

Handling and delivery fees may apply to your order  

More information about Hollow Hand tickets

Performing a set of new songs from their forthcoming, unreleased album (along with favourites from their last album 'Your Own Adventure'), Hollow Hand play a hometown show following their EU / UK tour with MJ Lenderman (including 2x sold out nights at The Garage in London).

 

The attitude of the album is definitely DIY" says Max Kinghorn-Mills of Hollow Hand's 3rd album. "About just doing everything yourself and not needing to rely on anyone. That's the one thing I love about doing this: no one has any answers for you, you are your own boss and it's YOUR OWN ADVENTURE. It's down to you.”

 

This independent spirit that propels the creative process is also one that gave birth to its title: Your Own Adventure. "The title is kind of a mantra to summarise my philosophy when writing and recording the album," he says. "I grew up immersing myself in all kinds of Fantasy genres and I loved the choose your own adventure game-books of Joe Dever. Other kinds of books I was reading throughout the writing process pointed me towards a kind of *belief in the self' - there's no definitive, correct way to live this life."

 

Despite the creative drive and singular determination behind the album, it's also one that has welcomed some outside input. "I'm very excited to have some guests on the album as I admire each of these musicians so much," says Kinghorn-Mills, referring to the input of Tim Smith (Midlake, Harp), Spencer Cullum, Holly Macve, Ryan Pollie and Oliver Newton, with the album being mixed by Chris Cohen in Los Angeles. "At some level it's a bit nerve wracking [bringing in other people] because this is something that you spend so much time building up and making sure that all the pieces are correct," he says. "Bringing people in can be like, 'oh god is this going to work?' I don't really ever collaborate much but when I do it's because I trust them."

 

Whether it was sitting at home and obsessing over every detail independently or adding some pedal steel all the way from Nashville, the ethos of the album remained rooted in trust, intuition and exploration - a sense of letting go and seeing where the project takes you. "I just decided I needed to more open minded, which was exciting,» he says. "All the little parts of my imagination which had been activated in the past slowly came through. I guess that's again about freedom and your own adventure. Like, just let it happen. Whereas in the past I've been a bit more self-aware. I've definitely let my guard down on this record and not been afraid of the path ahead."