Artist's albums
No Shortcuts (Live at the Academy)
2022 · album
One Hundred Pennies (Live)
2022 · single
Perch-less Bird
2021 · single
Christmas Anyway
2020 · EP
Sing a Christmas Song Anyway
2020 · single
Tell Me (We're Better Than This)
2020 · single
Soil in the Sky
2019 · album
We Were Together
2019 · single
What I Don't Know, Too (feat. Hayley Reardon)
2019 · single
Oklahoma Lullaby
2019 · single
All in Your Name
2019 · single
How Many More
2018 · single
Just Enough Sun
2018 · EP
Making Me Break
2015 · album
Heather Maloney
2013 · album
Time & Pocket Change
2011 · album
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Biography
Some albums are monoliths, compressed under the weight of a singular circumstance bearing down on an artist. Heather Maloney’s “Soil in the Sky” is a collective memory. Stitched together from personal and universal ecstasy, loss both intimate and ancient, Maloney's fourth full-length release is a collage of tremulous folk, existential ballads, and assertive rock. Taken as a whole, it’s a constellation that looks a lot like life. The artist holds the center. The Massachusetts-based “writer song-singer” found music in the midst of three years at a meditation center, honing a sound moored in days of silent reflection and reverence for storytellers like Joni, Rilke and Ken Burns. On “Soil in the Sky,” she takes us to the midwest’s existential crisis, a barstool scooching against fate, a make-my-day reckoning with society's old guard. They’re roads less traveled and she keeps good company. Dawes’ Taylor Goldsmith lends a distinctive duet to “We Were Together,” a rare love song from Maloney that nods to a Walt Whitman poem; Maloney and Rachel Price form a harmonic Voltron on “Enigma,” a triumphant uppercut to oppressive power structures. The album is sonically rounded out by an all-star cast of players including longtime collaborator Ryan Hommel, Griffin Goldsmith, Jared Olevsky, Reed Sutherland, Dave Eggar and Jay Ungar. “Soil In The Sky” is due out June 14 on Signature Sounds.