Monday, 15 June 2026

Three albums to help us to spring into summer - new releases by Juni Habel, Amy Hopwood and Anna McLuckie

Juni Habel's
Evergreen in Your Mind 
As we ease into summer, I’m still enjoying three beautiful recent releases that arrived in a springtime flurry, like a succession of refreshing musical April showers. These albums are all by talented female singer-songwriters and, to my ears at least, they hark back – each in their distinctive ways – to the golden age of early 1970s folk and pop.

Norwegian Juni Habel’s third album Evergreen in Your Mind is an exquisite collection with simple but effective arrangements that would make a perfect soundtrack for snuggling down in your woodland cabin after a stroll in the rain. Many of the tracks were recorded in Juni’s home or on the piano at the school where she works. Her songs often have a plucked, repetitive accompaniment (as typified by the title track) and the whole effect reminds me of the music of Vashti Bunyan and Bridget St John.

Amy Hopwood’s Gone to Flowers is an altogether quirkier affair. It takes a playful approach to various aspects of mortality. Based on the south coast of England, Amy is a multi-creative – singer, songwriter, musician and animator – inspired by folklore and fairy tales, but her songs are nothing if not down-to-earth. The album opens with ‘A Nice Wooden Bench’: “But I think I’d quite like a bench / with a lovely old view of the sea / where strangers can quietly sit / And ponder their mortality...
Amy Hopwood's
Gone to Flowers 
” Amy shows her self-deprecating humour in ‘I’d Rather Be Older Than Dead’ while the gorgeous ‘She Became a Bird’ – an unflinching but hopeful song about death and release – moves me to tears on every listen.

There’s something childlike about Amy’s songs that reminds me of the music of Melanie (perhaps the use of pianos and recorders, combined with her whimsicality.) Yet, there’s a wit and wisdom in songs like ‘The Closest Thing to Holding Hands’ and ‘All Shall Be Well.’ Above all, there’s comfort and joy in these songs, exemplified by her Mexican Day of the Dead take on the traditional English folk song ‘Like a Leaf’: “What's the life of us each any more than a leaf / we all have our seasons so why should we grieve / for though in this wide world we work and we play / like a leaf we will wither and must fade away...”

Anna McLuckie's
The Little Winters
 
The Little Winters
is the title of AnnaMcLuckie’s new album, named after an American term to describe the late frosts that arrive during springtime. Anna is an Edinburgh-born nu-folk singer and player of the clarsach (Celtic harp.) If you’re expecting something quite traditional, think again. The rich arrangements, featuring contributions on bass, cello and banjo, add immense warmth to tracks like ‘New Northern Lullaby’  and ‘I Promise to Linger’ the music is as enticing as the cover art, which shows Anna and friends enjoying an afternoon tea of jam tarts and berries. In some ways, The Little Winters is the perfect album for the transition from spring to summer. In the jaunty ‘Jay Bird,’ Anna sings, ‘summer breaks out, it’ll break out into fever. Time is easy. I have plenty here...”

Juni, Amy and Anna are all touring the UK currently so try to catch them live if you can but, at the very least, seek out these refreshingly original albums. 
  • Juni Habel’s Evergreen in Your Mind (Basin Rock)
  • Amy Hopwood Gone to Flowers (Self-released)
  • Anna McLuckie The Little Winters (Hudson Records)