Constant Follower

Scottish Experimental Folk Music project led by Stephen McAll From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Constant Follower is a Scottish experimental Folk music project led by songwriter Stephen McAll. The debut album, Neither Is, Nor Ever Was (2021), co-produced by McAll and Shimmy-Disc founder Mark Kramer, was shortlisted for the 2022 Scottish Album of the Year Award.[1][2] A collaborative follow-up with guitarist Scott William Urquhart, Even Days Dissolve (2023), made the 2023 SAY Award Longlist.[3][4] The second Constant Follower album, The Smile You Send Out Returns to You (2025), co-produced by McAll and Dan Duszynski (Loma, Sub Pop), entered several UK charts including No. 2 in Scotland, No. 1 on the Official Independent Breakers Chart, No. 14 on the Official Albums Sales Chart, and No. 10 on the Official Vinyl Albums Chart, and was longlisted for the 2025 SAY Award.[5][6][7][8]

OriginStirling, Scotland
GenresExperimental Folk, Slowcore
Years active2016–present
LabelsShimmy-Disc; Golden Hum Recordings; Last Night From Glasgow
Quick facts Background information, Origin ...
Constant Follower
Constant Follower's three singers from L-R, Stephen McAll, Amy Campbell and Kathleen Stosch.
The vocalists of Constant Follower, 2025
Background information
OriginStirling, Scotland
GenresExperimental Folk, Slowcore
Years active2016–present
LabelsShimmy-Disc; Golden Hum Recordings; Last Night From Glasgow
Members
  • Stephen McAll
  • Kathleen (Kessi) Stosch
  • Andrew (Kurd) Pankhurst
  • Amy Campbell
  • David Guild
  • Gareth Perrie
Websitewww.constantfollower.com
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History

Constant Follower formed in 2016 around McAll in Stirling, Scotland.[9] The debut LP Neither Is, Nor Ever Was was released on Shimmy-Disc in October 2021 to positive reviews. The album featured on multiple Album of the Year lists and was Shortlisted for the SAY Award the following year.[10][11][12][13][14][15]

In April 2023 McAll and Scott William Urquhart released the collaborative LP Even Days Dissolve on McAll's Golden Hum Recordings. Featuring the voice of Scottish poet Norman MacCaig on two tracks and several other collaborators including German Harper Andy Aquarius, Mark Tranmer (GNAC, The Montgolfier Brothers), CRPNTR and Matt Carmichael (saxophone); it was longlisted for the SAY Award the same year.[4][16]

The Smile You Send Out Returns to You followed in February 2025 via Last Night From Glasgow. The album received positive coverage, appeared on multiple Albums of the Year lists, and was longlisted for the 2025 SAY Award.[17] Album credits and single descriptions cite co-production by McAll and Dan Duszynski.[18][19][20][21][22]


Style and reception

Writers describe Constant Follower as experimental folk music with slowcore adjacency, favouring space, close vocal delivery with soaring harmonies, and atmospheric arrangements.[23][9][11][24][25]

Early reviews characterised the band's debut as part of the slowcore tradition, noting pacing and atmosphere that evoked the sound of Minnesotan duo Low.[26][27][28] [29] McAll's fingerstyle guitar, on tracks such as "Weave of the World", has been likened to that of Scottish Folk musician Bert Jansch.[26][30] Other critics drew parallels with Red House Painters and the atmospheric folk of Fleet Foxes.[31][32][33][34] Elsewhere, reviewers have likened the band's dynamic range to the "sonic intensity of Talk Talk,"[35] and compared their textured melancholy to Mojave 3's reflective dream-folk.[36]

Artwork

McAll has emphasised the visual presentation of Constant Follower's releases, highlighting in interviews "the incredible artwork that Heather Nevay created" for the 2025 album The Smile You Send Out returns To You.[37] The album's credits list Nevay as artwork creator and Timothy O'Donnell as designer,[38] while coverage noted the centrality of the visuals for the campaign.[39] The full-album visualisation featured "album artwork by Heather Nevay" and "album animation by Thrown Light."[40]

Earlier releases also placed focus on visual art: the debut LP Neither Is, Nor Ever Was credited cover art to Los Angeles painter Seonna Hong,[41][42] while collaborative mini-album Even Days Dissolve listed artwork by Japanese artist Kanae Park and design by Timothy O'Donnell.[43][44] The 7-inch single "Turn Around for Me" featured sleeve artwork by Scottish painter Peter Russell, noted in press materials and features at release.[36][45][46]

Video

McAll has foregrounded video as part of Constant Follower's presentation, commissioning short films for album tracks from young and early-career filmmakers and giving them wide creative autonomy, inviting "artists to respond to the music how they feel" and avoiding band interference.[47][48] He has discussed video concepts in interviews, including the "Patient Has Own Supply" clip.[49][50]

Notable performances

Constant Follower showcased at South by Southwest in 2022 and 2023.[51][52] The band performed at Cambridge Folk Festival in 2024.[53] In 2022 the band released a filmed live performance from the crown of the National Wallace Monument in Stirling, directed by Martin J. Pickering.[54][55]

Members

Current
  • Stephen McAll - vocals, guitar, instrumentation, songwriting, production (2016–present)
  • Kathleen (Kessi) Stosch - vocals, bass guitar (2016–present)
  • Andrew (Kurd) Pankhurst - electric guitar (2017–present)
  • Amy Campbell - vocals (2019–present)
  • David Guild - bass guitar (2022–present)
  • Gareth Perrie - vocals, piano (2022–present)

Discography

Studio albums

More information Year, Title ...
YearTitleLabelNotes
2021Neither Is, Nor Ever WasShimmy-Disc; Golden Hum recordingsSAY Award Shortlist 2022.[56][57]
2023Even Days Dissolve (with Scott William Urquhart)Golden Hum RecordingsSAY Award Longlist 2023.[4][58]
2025The Smile You Send Out Returns To YouLast Night From Glasgow; Golden Hum RecordingsUK charts: SCO #2; Independent Breakers #1; Album Sales #14; Vinyl #10; Folk #3. SAY Award Longlist 2025.[5][59][60][61]
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Singles

Videography

From Neither Is, Nor Ever Was era (2020-2022)
  • "Set Aside Some Time" - directed by Martin J. Pickering; 30 July 2020.[64]
  • "I Can't Wake You" - directed by Nathalia van der Kerst; 7 November 2020.[65]
  • "Altona" - directed by Nathalia van der Kerst; 12 November 2020.[66]
  • "The Merry Dancers on TV" - stop-motion animation by Fiona Burton; 2021.[67][68]
  • "Weave of the World" - directed by Martin J. Pickering; 22 September 2021.[69]
  • "What's Left To Say" - stop-motion animation by George Farrow-Hawkins; 30 September 2021.[70]
  • "Spirits In The Roof Tree" - directed by Michael Prince; 14 October 2021.[71]
  • Neither Is, Nor Ever Was - 42-minute album film directed by Sean Hall; 2 March 2022.[72]
  • "WEICHA" - stop-motion animation by Alejandro Colunga, Paper Brain; 11 March 2022.[73]
  • "One Word Away" - stop-motion animation by Greer Pester; 15 April 2022.[74]
From Even Days Dissolve (2023)
From Turn Around For Me / See You Soon (AA-side single) (2024)
From The Smile You Send Out Returns to You (2024-2025)
  • "Whole Be" - directed by Peter Lilly (Code Word Zebra); Aug 2024.[81]
  • "All Is Well" - directed by Kris Boyle; Sep 2024.[82][83]
  • "Patient Has Own Supply" - directed by Martin J. Pickering; Nov 2024.[84][85]
  • "Almost Time To Go" - directed by Kris Boyle; 16 Jan 2025.[86]
  • "The Smile You Send Out Returns To You" - stop-motion animation by Emmerson New; 2025.[87]
  • "The Smile You Send Out Returns To You" - official album visualiser; 2025.[88]
  • "Gentle Teaching" - stop-motion animation by Tsumugi Yagi; 2025.[89]
  • "Happy Birthdays" - directed by Martin J. Pickering; September 2025.[90]
  • "It’s Only Silence" - directed by Kris Boyle; featuring Mark Tranmer (GNAC); Oct 2025.[91]

Awards and nominations

References

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