Artist's albums
Show Me How
2022 · EP
Break It All
2022 · single
Show Me How
2022 · single
Love Is a Stone
2021 · album
Down Down Down
2021 · single
Come Down / Come Down (Acoustic)
2021 · single
Trouble in Your Heart
2021 · single
Out of My Head / Out of My Head (Acoustic)
2020 · single
I Need to Love You
2020 · single
Parallels, Vol. III
2018 · album
Better Than the Pain / Bronze (Acoustic)
2018 · single
Mt. Mineral X The Woodlands
2018 · EP
Fair and Bright (Hushed Mix) / Day to Day (Lush Mix)
2018 · single
Long Lost Century (Piano and Cello)
2017 · single
Long Lost Century (Piano Solo)
2017 · single
Gems and Bones
2017 · album
Heavy Hands Remix
2017 · EP
Parallels, Vol. I
2017 · album
Parallels, Vol. II
2017 · album
Secret Language
2017 · EP
The Woodlands
2017 · album
Long Lost Century (Stone Van Brooken Remix)
2015 · single
Similar artists
French For Rabbits
Artist
Lotte Kestner
Artist
Little May
Artist
Siv Jakobsen
Artist
Brooke Annibale
Artist
Adna
Artist
Isobel Anderson
Artist
Odina
Artist
Emily Jane White
Artist
Lowland Hum
Artist
Rosie Carney
Artist
Austin Basham
Artist
Puzzle Muteson
Artist
Aisha Badru
Artist
Angel Snow
Artist
Lydia Luce
Artist
Ira Wolf
Artist
Andrea von Kampen
Artist
Rosemary & Garlic
Artist
Ciaran Lavery
Artist
Biography
Over a decade ago, two quiet souls first crossed paths, married, traipsed around the U.S., Europe, and Central America, moved to Oregon, made three albums, and finally settled in the tiny town of McCall, Idaho. The whole story plays out with the euphoria of a daydream—much like the music of The Woodlands (Hannah and Samuel Robertson) does. As if ebbing and flowing with the seasons, blankets of cozy synthesizers, delicate acoustic guitar, and breathless harmonies pile like soft snow on a lazy weekend afternoon. After hundreds of syncs, acclaim from Spin, Paste, and KCRW, and over 40 million total streams, the singer-songwriter duo slip deeper into aural bliss on their fourth full-length album, Love Is A Stone. The songs on Love Is A Stone seem to absorb the space around them. “Musically, we probably pick up some of the tones, spaciousness, vacancy of society, and tranquility of this small mountain-town,” observes Samuel. “Being a lot closer to the natural world puts you in a little bit of a dreamlike state,” Hannah adds. “It changes your sensory interpretations. There’s a distinction between manmade stimulus and nature that slowly seeps into your psyche.” The new songs showcase the expanded sonic palette of The Woodlands, which incorporates analog synths and organic percussion in addition to their traditionally pure instruments like acoustic guitar, cello, strings and piano.