Tomorrow's Yesterdays

2022 studio album by Little Boots From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Tomorrow's Yesterdays is the fourth studio album by English singer and songwriter Little Boots. Solely written and produced by herself, it was released on 18 March 2022 via her own imprint, On Repeat Records.[1]

Released18 March 2022 (2022-03-18)
Length43:49
LabelOn Repeat
Quick facts Studio album by Little Boots, Released ...
Tomorrow's Yesterdays
Studio album by
Released18 March 2022 (2022-03-18)
Genre
Length43:49
LabelOn Repeat
ProducerVictoria Hesketh
Little Boots chronology
Working Girl
(2015)
Tomorrow's Yesterdays
(2022)
Singles from Tomorrow's Yesterdays
  1. "Silver Balloons"
    Released: 24 September 2021
  2. "Landline"
    Released: 26 November 2021
  3. "Crying on the Inside"
    Released: 25 January 2022
  4. "Out (Out)"
    Released: 22 February 2022
Close

Her first album in seven years, since Working Girl (2015), it was preceded by four singles: "Balloons", "Landline", "Crying on the Inside" and "Out (Out)".[2][3][4][5]

Track listing

All tracks are written and produced by Victoria Hesketh.

More information No., Title ...
Tomorrow's Yesterdays – digital download and vinyl[6]
No.TitleLength
1."Love the Beginning"3:47
2."Silver Balloons"4:25
3."Landline"4:08
4."Back to Mine"4:37
5."Crying on the Inside"3:27
6."Heavenly"3:44
7."Deborah"3:28
8."Out (Out)"4:24
9."Want U Back"4:39
10."Nothing Ever Changes"3:14
11."Tomorrow's Yesterdays"3:50
Close

Production

Hesketh has stated that the entire album was completely funded from donations and subscriptions on Patreon. Through the site, she also shared "the songwriting and album making process the whole way through", and that the fans "totally shaped" the album as she was able to get feedback on demos and artwork directly from her audience before release.

Hesketh describes the album as "DIY disco pop", citing 70s artists like Elton John, Carole King, and the Bee Gees as inspiration - much of the album's promotion would occur whilst playing the ABBA Voyage tour.[7] She said the decision to self-produce the album was one of some "necessity", given production took place largely during the COVID-19 pandemic.[2]

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI