Artist's albums
Through A Dark Wood (Deluxe)
2021 · album
Reflections on a Grey Dawn (feat. Dustin O'Halloran)
2021 · single
Witchknife
2021 · single
Through A Dark Wood
2020 · album
Frank O'Hara
2020 · single
Forever Nevermore
2020 · single
Fear of Failure
2019 · single
Song Spells, No.1: Cedarsmoke
2014 · album
Old World Romance
2012 · album
Turn the Dirt Over
2010 · single
White Water, White Bloom
2009 · album
Leaves in the River
2007 · album
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Biography
Everything is alright now. Alex Brown Church — the man behind the dark folk, indie rock band Sea Wolf — wants you to know that from the start. Really. Sea Wolf’s eagerly anticipated fifth LP, Through A Dark Wood (Out March 20, 2020), proves it in 11 textured, sometimes-acoustic, sometimes-electronic, unabashedly honest tracks. But beforehand, everything was decidedly not okay. Church wrote and recorded an entire album after 2014’s streaming-only, stripped down album Song Spells No. 1: Cedarsmoke, but decided to scrap it. He realized those songs lacked a through-line and felt conceptually disjointed, something he attributes to a sense of denial of what had been going behind the scenes — dealing with the disintegration of a long-term relationship, reconciling with the death of an estranged parent, and trying to cope with the magnitude of current events, all while maintaining a passionately beloved, yet slow-burning creative career. So Church mustered his courage to go back to the drawing board. Starting from scratch, he spent months in his northeast Los Angeles studio writing, singing, tracking, and producing the new set of Sea Wolf songs that comprise Through A Dark Wood. The result is a catharsis record, not merely a breakup record — one that highlights power in vulnerability and bravery in the face of fear. “I think a recurring theme of all of my albums has been this sense of hope,” Church says, “coming out of a dark place and into a light place.”