Covey lyrics
Artist · 118 441 listeners per month
Artist's albums
1991 (Acoustic)
2023 · single
Homebound
2021 · single
Class Of Cardinal Sin
2021 · album
Point Mutation
2021 · EP
1991
2021 · single
Sam Jam / Crooked Spine
2021 · single
Tour To Nobody
2020 · album
Paper Moon Sessions
2019 · single
Dead of Night - The Wild Honey Pie Buzzsession
2019 · single
Covey on Audiotree Live
2019 · EP
Some Cats Live, Some Cats Die
2019 · album
Haggarty
2017 · album
Same White Shoes
2017 · single
Bows
2016 · single
Stranger
2015 · single
Similar artists
Duncan Fellows
Artist
Michigander
Artist
Bjéar
Artist
Ezra Bell
Artist
John Vincent III
Artist
Prince of Eden
Artist
Cottonwood Firing Squad
Artist
Slaughter Beach, Dog
Artist
Atta Boy
Artist
Jack Symes
Artist
Edwin Raphael
Artist
Young Mister
Artist
Field Medic
Artist
Jaguar Sun
Artist
Saintseneca
Artist
Bendigo Fletcher
Artist
Cape Francis
Artist
Deal Casino
Artist
Runnner
Artist
The Brazen Youth
Artist
Biography
Tom Freeman—the Brooklyn-based British artist and musician known as Covey—has had a weird year. He did a Tour To Nobody, playing shows in rural locations across the American northeast for, well, nobody. He recorded the audio and video, turning the audio into a record, Tour To Nobody. He created a Tik Tok account, via which he began sharing the figurines which would adorn the cover of his next LP. In a matter of weeks, over 1 million followers were tuning in to learn about (and swap theories concerning) the increasingly intricate semi-fictional universe Freeman is building through his music. Enter Covey’s new full-length record, Class Of Cardinal Sin. The record’s cover features a diorama depicting what, at first glance, appears to be a simple class graduation photo, complete with a blackboard with white lettering at the front. Upon inspection though, the classmates are in disrepair. Some are missing limbs; others are casting satanist spells; and most have a human body beneath the head of a creature. Still, they’re dressed and arranged like students, grotesque and miserable. The home, the class photo, the songs: these are all part of a network of synapses that comprise Class Of Cardinal Sin, refracted through Freeman’s acerbic, wrenchingly sharp storytelling. This storytelling is backed by major-key melodies realized on acoustic and electric guitars, bass and warbling keys, percussion that shifts from gentle to titanic. — Luke Ottenhof