Artist's albums
Knife Went In
2023 · single
Avalanche
2023 · single
OFFAIR: from the forest floor
2023 · album
ambrosia
2023 · single
dusk
2023 · single
sunrise mtn
2023 · single
It's Dangerous To Go Alone
2022 · EP
Merry Go Round
2021 · single
Fireside
2021 · single
Little Islands (Jenny Owen Youngs Remix)
2021 · single
Echo Mountain
2021 · album
Dungeons and Dragons (S. Carey Remix)
2021 · single
Dungeons and Dragons (Generationals Remix)
2021 · single
Witchcraft
2021 · single
Follow You (John Mark Nelson Remix)
2021 · single
Little Bird
2020 · single
Follow You / Sunfish
2020 · single
Night Shift (Extended Edition)
2020 · album
Dreaming on the Bus (Ra Ra Riot Remix)
2020 · single
Vampire Weeknight (The One AM Radio Remix)
2020 · single
Teenage Dream
2020 · single
Maybe Next Year
2019 · single
Gravitron
2019 · single
Dreaming on the Bus
2019 · single
Living Room
2019 · single
Vampire Weeknight
2019 · single
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Biography
In the decade since Jenny Owen Youngs last released a full-length album, she’s toured the world, co-written a #1 hit single, launched a wildly popular podcast, landed a book deal, placed songs in a slew of films and television series, moved from Brooklyn to Los Angeles to coastal Maine, and gotten married, divorced, and married again. She’s done everything, it seems, except release another album….until now. Avalanche, Youngs’ exceptional debut for Yep Roc records, offers up an achingly beautiful exploration of loss, resilience, and growth from an artist who’s experienced more than her fair share of each in recent years. Produced by Josh Kaufman (Bonny Light Horseman, The Hold Steady, Cassandra Jenkins, Josh Ritter) and written with a series of friends including S. Carey, Madi Diaz, The Antlers’ Peter Silberman, and Christian Lee Hutson, the songs are deceptively serene here, layering Youngs’ infectious pop sensibilities atop lush, dreamy arrangements that often belie the swift emotional currents lurking underneath. Her performances, meanwhile, are riveting and nuanced to match, gentle yet insistent as they reckon with the pain of regret and the joy of redemption, sometimes in the very same breath. The result is the most raw and arresting release of Youngs’ remarkable career, a brutally honest, deeply vulnerable work of self-reflection that learns to make peace with the past as it transforms doubt and grief into hope and transcendence.