Chelsea Wolfe
Chelsea Wolfe (born November 14, 1983) is an American singer-songwriter and musician renowned for her genre-blending work that fuses gothic rock, doom metal, folk, and electronic elements.[1][2] Raised in the Sacramento area of Northern California in a musical household—her father played guitar in the country band El Dorado, which opened for artists like Tanya Tucker—she began recording songs using his home studio equipment as early as age nine.[2] Now based in Los Angeles, Wolfe initially self-released music in the mid-2000s before gaining wider recognition with her 2010 debut full-length album, The Grime and the Glow, a raw collection of sparse, bedroom-recorded folk tracks that established her haunting vocal style.[1][3] Over the course of her career, Wolfe has evolved her sound across seven studio albums, incorporating heavier sludge metal riffs, industrial noise, and atmospheric electronics while maintaining a core of introspective lyricism.[4][5] Key releases include Apokalypsis (2011), which introduced denser instrumentation and apocalyptic themes; Pain Is Beauty (2013), blending folk with electronic grandeur; Abyss (2015), her heaviest work inspired by sleep paralysis; Hiss Spun (2017), produced by Converge guitarist Kurt Ballou; Birth of Violence (2019), a return to acoustic roots; and her latest, She Reaches Out to She Reaches Out to She (2024), a cathartic exploration of personal healing co-produced by TV on the Radio's Dave Sitek and mixed by Shawn Everett.[6][7][5][4][8][9] Wolfe's music frequently delves into themes of trauma, the supernatural, cycles of destruction and rebirth, and psychological introspection, often drawing from personal experiences like sleep paralysis and influences ranging from early R&B artist Aaliyah to the Book of Revelation.[2][8] Her live performances and recordings emphasize immersive, gothic aesthetics, earning praise for their emotional depth and sonic innovation, with critics noting her ability to make "sweetness heavy" and vulnerability visceral.[4][3] Beyond albums, she has contributed to film soundtracks, including Ti West's X (2022) and MaXXXine (2024), and toured extensively, including North American dates in 2024 supporting her latest release.[1][10][11]Biography
Early life
Chelsea Joy Wolfe was born on November 14, 1983, in Roseville, California.[10] She grew up in the surrounding Sacramento area, particularly in the Old Roseville neighborhood, in a household deeply immersed in music.[12] Her father was a country musician who played in a local band called El Dorado and maintained a home studio where he recorded and performed.[13] This environment provided Wolfe with early, hands-on exposure to music creation, as her father involved her in band activities and shared his passion for the craft from a young age.[3] Wolfe's childhood was marked by an organic introduction to music, beginning around age nine when she started writing and recording her own songs—often melancholic in tone—in her father's studio.[14] Influenced by the family's record collection, which featured country and folk traditions alongside R&B and artists such as Fleetwood Mac, she developed a broad appreciation for diverse sounds.[15] Lacking formal music education, Wolfe was largely self-taught; her father handed down a guitar to her and provided informal guidance on recording techniques, while she independently learned to play both guitar and piano during her adolescence.[16] Her high school years in the Sacramento region further nurtured this interest, as she continued experimenting with songwriting and instrumentation in informal settings.[17] In the early 2010s, around 2010–2011, Wolfe relocated from the Sacramento area to Los Angeles to expand her creative horizons and immerse herself in a larger artistic community.[18] This transition allowed her to build on her foundational experiences and pursue music more intensively.[19]Personal life
Wolfe relocated to Los Angeles in the early 2010s shortly after the release of her 2011 album Apokalypsis, a move that facilitated her connection with management and label Sargent House, enabling greater creative independence and the exploration of more intimate acoustic material on her 2012 release Unknown Rooms.[3] This shift from her Northern California roots marked a period of professional growth, allowing her to expand her audience while maintaining artistic control beyond initial perceptions of her work as occult-themed.[3] In the late 2010s, Wolfe returned to Northern California, settling at the base of the Sierra Nevada mountains near her hometown of Sacramento around 2017, seeking recovery from the exhaustion of extensive touring and a desire to reconnect with her origins.[20] The relocation provided a secluded environment surrounded by trees, where she adopted two cats and incorporated daily nature walks into her routine, fostering mental and physical rejuvenation through practices like yoga and meditation.[20] As of 2025, she continues to reside deep in the woods of Northern California, embracing an introverted lifestyle that includes simple rituals such as burning incense and using tarot decks like Kim Krans's Archetypes for personal reflection and inspiration.[21] Wolfe achieved sobriety from alcohol in January 2021, following a history of substance use that began in her pre-teen years and intensified during her touring career as a means to cope with creative and social pressures.[22] The process was influenced by the reflective isolation of the 2020 pandemic, during which she began work on her album She Reaches Out to She Reaches Out to She, though full clarity and thematic purging emerged only after sobriety took hold.[22] This journey also prompted her to end a toxic personal relationship, contributing to a broader sense of emotional liberation and reduced social engagement in her daily life.[22] Wolfe maintains privacy regarding her romantic partnerships, focusing public discussions on themes of self-empowerment rather than specific details.[22] Beyond music, Wolfe's interests encompass a deep affinity for nature and environmentalism, including sustainable practices like reducing single-use plastics and sourcing ethical herbs and crystals, as well as advocating for proactive climate policies through informed voting.[23] She draws inspiration from Northern California's giant sequoia trees, such as the "Mother of the Forest," and integrates witchcraft elements like tarot readings, Reiki, and herbal healing into her routine, viewing them as tools for intuitive living aligned with natural cycles.[23][21] In visual arts, she has collaborated on Super 8 film videos that blend urban and rural landscapes, often tying into her thematic explorations of healing and environment.[23] Extensive touring in 2024 and 2025, including dates with acts like Wardruna, presents challenges for Wolfe as an introvert, prompting her to rely on pre-show rituals and nature-inspired comforts to maintain personal balance amid the demands of travel and performance.[21] This personal growth through sobriety and relocation has subtly influenced thematic shifts in her later work toward greater authenticity and release.[22]Career
2006–2011: Early releases
Chelsea Wolfe began her musical journey in 2006 with the self-recorded and self-released album Mistake in Parting, a collection of singer-songwriter pop tracks produced in her home setup in Sacramento, California, using basic equipment during February to July of that year.[24] At age 21, Wolfe expressed dissatisfaction with the results, viewing it as a learning experience that prompted her to explore darker, more experimental directions in subsequent work.[24] The album remained a limited, unofficial release, distributed informally among close circles and later shared online, reflecting her initial DIY ethos without formal label support.[25] In 2010, Wolfe transitioned to a small independent label with The Grime and the Glow, her first official full-length release on Pendu Sound Recordings, issued on December 28.[24] Recorded on a portable eight-track Tascam 488 with contributions from friends, including piano by Ben Chisholm, the album captured a raw, lo-fi aesthetic in a home environment shortly after an inspiring European tour.[24] Themes of introspection and gothic folk permeated the sparse, haunting ballads, often featuring Wolfe's vocals over her mother's classical guitar, evoking desolation and emotional depth.[2] The record garnered positive reception in underground scenes for its cross-genre intimacy and atmospheric production, building a niche following through limited vinyl pressings and word-of-mouth in folk and experimental communities.[2][26] Wolfe's 2011 album Apokalypsis, released August 23 on Pendu Sound, marked a stylistic evolution toward doom-laden and experimental elements, recorded in a professional Los Angeles studio with Chisholm on keys and additional collaborators handling bass, drums, and guitars.[24] Drawing inspiration from the Book of Revelation, the tracks blended thick instrumentals with Wolfe's ethereal, echoing vocals, shifting from the acoustic folk of her prior work to heavier, apocalyptic soundscapes in songs like "Demons" and "Tracks (Tall Bodies)." This release solidified her cult status in alternative circles, praised for its bold fusion of gothic rock and folk-doom, and spread via grassroots promotion in niche publications and online forums.[27] During this period, Wolfe's early touring emphasized intimate, DIY performances, starting with small California venues like San Francisco's Café du Nord in February 2011, where she played stripped-down sets to local audiences.[28] A pivotal 2009 three-month European tour with a collective of nomadic performance artists exposed her to unconventional spaces such as cathedrals and basements across the continent, fostering initial international buzz and influencing her shift to more immersive live presentations.[29] These grassroots efforts, often solo or with minimal backing, helped cultivate an underground following through word-of-mouth before larger festival slots. Wolfe's label trajectory evolved from pure DIY self-distribution in 2006 to partnering with Pendu Sound Recordings—a Brooklyn-based indie imprint specializing in experimental and noise acts—starting in 2010, which provided limited but broader vinyl distribution and professional mastering for her growing catalog.[24] This move from home-released demos to a niche label supported her underground momentum without mainstream commercialization, setting the stage for wider recognition.[30]2012–2019: Sargent House period
In 2012, Chelsea Wolfe signed with Sargent House for management and label representation, marking a pivotal shift toward broader professional support and distribution for her music. This partnership facilitated the release of her third studio album, Pain Is Beauty, on September 3, 2013, which blended gothic folk structures with noise experimentation and orchestral swells, creating a sense of escalating emotional grandeur through layered electronics and reverb-heavy production. The album's diverse soundscapes, drawing from her earlier acoustic roots while incorporating industrial percussion and brooding guitar work, earned critical praise for its atmospheric depth and dynamic builds reminiscent of post-rock influences. To promote the record, Wolfe embarked on an extensive European co-headlining tour with Russian Circles in October 2013, performing full sets across cities like Prague, Bologna, and Glasgow, which helped solidify her presence in the international heavy music scene.[31][7][32] By 2015, Wolfe deepened her sonic palette with Abyss, released on August 7 via Sargent House and produced by John Congleton, which explored neofolk introspection alongside electronic textures and doom metal riffs, resulting in her heaviest and most ambitious work to date. The album's themes of existential dread and dreamlike paralysis were amplified by distorted guitars and contributions from additional musicians, including Mike Sullivan of Russian Circles on bass, leading to widespread acclaim for its immersive blend of genres and emotional intensity, with Pitchfork awarding it an 8.1 for its innovative fusion. This period saw Wolfe transitioning to larger venues and festival stages, including performances at Roadburn in 2017, Primavera Sound, and Hellfest, expanding her audience globally through rigorous touring that showcased her evolving live presence with a full band.[5][33][34] In 2017, Hiss Spun, released on September 22 by Sargent House, represented a further embrace of heaviness, produced by Converge guitarist Kurt Ballou at his GodCity Studio in Massachusetts, infusing industrial aggression and sludge metal elements into Wolfe's compositions. The record delved into themes of interpersonal violence, self-destruction, and fleeting redemption, conveyed through raw, propulsive tracks featuring guest contributions from Troy Van Leeuwen of Queens of the Stone Age on guitar, earning high marks for its visceral energy and unflinching lyrical honesty. Two years later, Birth of Violence arrived on September 13, 2019, shifting toward a minimalist acoustic framework with folk-rock leanings, recorded primarily at Wolfe's home studio in rural Northern California to foster an intimate, introspective atmosphere. This album hinted at personal transformation, including her partial embrace of sobriety during its creation, allowing for stripped-down arrangements centered on guitar, piano, and viola that emphasized vulnerability and renewal without abandoning her dark thematic core.[4][35][36][37]2020–present: Independent evolution
Following the introspective acoustic explorations of her 2019 album Birth of Violence, Chelsea Wolfe entered a period of adaptation amid global disruptions.[38] The COVID-19 pandemic significantly impacted Wolfe's activities in 2020 and 2021, leading to the postponement of international tours, including her New Zealand dates originally scheduled for June 2020, which were rescheduled to June 2021.[39] These delays reflected broader industry challenges, forcing artists to pivot toward remote collaborations and delayed releases. During this time, Wolfe contributed vocals and creative input to Converge's collaborative album Bloodmoon: I, alongside her bandmate Ben Chisholm and Stephen Brodsky; the project was announced on September 28, 2021, and released on November 19, 2021, via Epitaph Records.[40] In 2022, Wolfe expanded into film scoring, providing vocals and co-composing the original soundtrack for Ti West's horror film X alongside Tyler Bates and Ben Chisholm; the album was released on March 25, 2022, through A24 Music, featuring tracks like "My God" and "Maxine Meets Pearl" that blended her ethereal style with tense, atmospheric horror elements.[41] Wolfe marked a pivotal shift in 2023 by signing with Loma Vista Recordings on September 20, following a decade with Sargent House, signaling her independent evolution toward broader creative control.[42] This partnership culminated in the release of her seventh studio album, She Reaches Out to She Reaches Out to She, on February 9, 2024, which embraced an electronic and synth-pop direction, incorporating pulsating synths, industrial menace, and themes of personal rebirth and transformation.[8] The album's production highlighted Wolfe's vocal vulnerability against layered electronic atmospheres, diverging from her earlier heavy and folk influences while maintaining gothic undertones. Complementing the LP, she issued two EPs in 2024: Undone on August 30, featuring remixes by artists like Boy Harsher and ††† (Crosses), and Unbound on November 15, offering stripped-down, reverb-free acoustic reinterpretations of album tracks to emphasize raw emotional delivery.[43][44] Throughout 2024, Wolfe continued her soundtrack work, contributing haunting vocals to Tyler Bates' score for MaXXXine, the third installment in Ti West's X trilogy, which anchored the film's unsettling tone and was released digitally on July 5, 2024.[45] She undertook extensive touring to support She Reaches Out to She Reaches Out to She, including a North American headline run from February 27 to March 30 with support from Divide and Dissolve, followed by European dates starting in late May, encompassing over 20 shows across the UK, Ireland, and continental Europe.[42] Entering 2025, Wolfe collaborated with industrial rock band Health on the single "MEAN," released May 5 via Loma Vista Recordings, where her layered vocals intertwined with electronic, dreamlike production to create a spellbinding track exploring cryptic themes of introspection.[46] This was followed by her Australia and New Zealand headline tour from May 21 to 30, marking her return to the region post-pandemic delays.[47] As of November 2025, Wolfe has hinted at ongoing projects, including early development of her next album, with interviews suggesting a continued focus on personal growth, witchcraft-inspired motifs, and sonic experimentation.[21]Collaborations
Band projects
In 2018, Chelsea Wolfe formed the supergroup Mrs. Piss as a collaborative outlet with drummer and multi-instrumentalist Jess Gowrie, whom she had previously worked with in the short-lived band Red Host during their teenage years.[48] The project draws on their shared influences from punk, metal, industrial, and 1990s rock, serving as a cathartic space for raw expression and friendship, with Wolfe handling vocals and guitar while Gowrie contributes drums, guitar, bass, and programming.[49] Their debut album, Self-Surgery, was released on May 29, 2020, via Sargent House, featuring eight tracks that blend aggressive sludge riffs and introspective lyrics co-written by the duo to explore themes of vulnerability, isolation, and unfiltered femininity.[50] A live recording of the full album, captured in Northern California in December 2020, followed in 2022, highlighting their energetic stage dynamic during select performances that integrated the project into Wolfe's touring schedule.[51] Wolfe's most prominent band-like collaboration came with the metalcore band Converge on the 2021 album Bloodmoon: I, a full-length project that positioned her as a co-lead alongside Converge's core members, including guitarist Kurt Ballou, who had previously produced several of her solo records such as Pain Is Beauty (2013), Abyss (2015), and Hiss Spun (2017).[40] Released on November 19, 2021, via Epitaph Records, the album incorporates Wolfe's haunting vocals and atmospheric contributions—alongside those from her bandmate Ben Chisholm and Cave In's Stephen Brodsky—across ten tracks that fuse Converge's signature intensity with gothic and post-metal elements, emphasizing themes of cosmic dread and emotional release.[52] This partnership extended from earlier joint tours, like the 2017 Blood Moon tour, and marked a deeper integration of Wolfe's sound into Converge's framework, resulting in live renditions of select tracks during subsequent performances.[53]Soundtracks and guest appearances
Wolfe's foray into film scoring began in 2014 with her composition for the short film Lone, directed by Mark Pellington, where she collaborated with Ben Chisholm to create a sweeping, surrealistic soundtrack that integrated elements from her album Pain Is Beauty.[54] This project marked an early exploration of her music in visual media, emphasizing atmospheric tension and emotional depth.[55] In 2022, Wolfe co-composed the original soundtrack for Ti West's horror film X alongside composer Tyler Bates, contributing haunting vocals and instrumental pieces that amplified the film's slasher themes.[56] The album features original tracks such as "My God" and her ethereal cover of "Oui, Oui, Marie" by Arthur H., blending gothic rock influences with tense, cinematic orchestration. Wolfe continued her collaboration with Bates for the 2024 film MaXXXine, the third installment in West's horror trilogy, providing distinctive vocals that infuse the score with unsettling, electronic-infused horror elements reminiscent of 1980s synth aesthetics.[45] Her contributions, including vocal performances on tracks like "Sorry to Disturb You," enhance the soundtrack's blend of noir jazz, orchestral swells, and retro electronic textures.[57] Beyond scoring, Wolfe has made notable guest appearances on other artists' recordings. She provided additional vocals and production on "Night People" from Deafheaven's 2018 album Ordinary Corrupt Human Love, adding a gothic layer to the post-metal track.[58] In 2021, she collaborated with Xiu Xiu on "One Hundred Years," a duet from their covers album Oh No, where her soaring vocals complement the experimental noise rock arrangement of The Cure's original.[59] More recently, in 2025, Wolfe featured on the single "MEAN" by HEALTH, delivering lyrics that explore eroded relationships over industrial electronic beats.[60] Later that year, she collaborated with the German pagan folk band Faun on the single "NIMUE", released August 8, which delves into Arthurian legend themes of tragic love.[61] In September, Wolfe appeared on "Immortal" from Ho99o9's album Tomorrow We Escape, released September 9 via 999 Deathkult and Last Gang Records.[62] She also provided vocals on "All Midnights" from Venera's album Exinfinite, released September 12.[63] Wolfe's music has also appeared in various television and film placements, such as the song "Survive" in the series How to Get Away with Murder, underscoring moments of emotional intensity.[64] These syncs, including features in shows like The Returned, highlight her versatility in enhancing narrative atmospheres with her dark, introspective sound.[65] Such contributions often tie thematically to her solo style, emphasizing themes of isolation and haunting introspection without diverging into full band commitments.Art and craft
Musical style and influences
Chelsea Wolfe's music is characterized by a fusion of gothic rock, doom metal, and folk elements, often incorporating ambient, industrial, and electronic textures to create immersive, atmospheric soundscapes. Her work draws from heavy rock and drone influences, blending ethereal vocals with abrasive instrumentation to evoke a sense of haunting intimacy and sonic density.[3][66][67] In her 2024 album She Reaches Out to She Reaches Out to She, she incorporates synth-driven electronics and pop-infused structures, marking a shift toward more accessible yet chaotic arrangements while retaining her signature darkness. Following this, the Unbound EP (2024) featured stripped-down acoustic versions of select tracks, emphasizing her folk roots.[68][69][44] Her stylistic evolution reflects a progression from introspective, lo-fi folk roots in early releases like The Grime and the Glow (2010), which featured desolate acoustic minimalism, to heavier, noise-infused industrial sounds in mid-career works such as Hiss Spun (2017), emphasizing aggressive riffs and dense production.[3][70] By 2019's Birth of Violence, she returned to stripped-down acoustic folk, prioritizing raw songwriting and subtlety before embracing bolder electronic experimentation in subsequent projects. In 2025, her collaboration on the single "MEAN" with HEALTH integrated ethereal vocals with electronic noise rock elements.[66][69][71] Wolfe's vocal techniques, including layered whispers, ethereal hooks, and occasional screams, enhance this versatility, oscillating between soft minimalism and intense, trance-like repetition to build emotional contrast.[3][72] Thematically, Wolfe's lyrics explore darkness, personal trauma, and spiritual rebirth, often drawing from experiences like sleep paralysis and liminal states between reality and dream.[18][73] Her work addresses feminism and feminine power amid broader motifs of American societal darkness and inner intuition, using confessional storytelling to confront harsh realities with glimmers of hope.[74][9] Influences include country and folk artists like Johnny Cash, Joni Mitchell, and Hank Williams for their narrative depth; heavier acts such as Swans, Nine Inch Nails, Queens of the Stone Age, and black metal for abrasive intensity; and R&B figures like Aaliyah for smooth, contrasting textures.[3][66][70] Non-musical inspirations encompass literary sources like the Book of Revelation and end-times narratives, as well as visual artists Ingmar Bergman and David Lynch, which inform her apocalyptic and cinematic dreamscapes.[3][75] Critics have praised Wolfe for her atmospheric depth and genre-transcending approach, highlighting the oppressive intensity and rich ambience in her compositions that balance beauty with unease.[76][77] Her sound has been lauded as a deep, dark masterpiece blending heavy discomfort with softer elements, earning comparisons to artists like Bat for Lashes for her ethereal gothic folk and Lingua Ignota for raw emotional extremity.[77][78]Equipment
Chelsea Wolfe primarily employs semi-hollowbody electric guitars for her recordings and performances, with the Gibson ES-335 serving as a cornerstone instrument due to its warm tone and versatility in achieving both clean and distorted sounds.[79][67] She also favors Fender offset models, such as the Jaguar and Jazzmaster, which contribute to her atmospheric and experimental guitar textures through their bright, jangly qualities and modified necks for enhanced playability.[79][80] For acoustic elements, particularly on her 2019 album Birth of Violence, Wolfe relies on Taylor models like the 416ce and 716ce, which provide a clean, resonant foundation for her folk-inflected songwriting without pedals or amplification.[81][79] In her keyboard and electronic setup, Wolfe incorporates analog synthesizers to layer ambient and bass elements, notably using a MiniMoog Model D for heavy bass synth lines in earlier works like Abyss.[82][80] Piano features in her early demos and continues in spectral forms for melodic accents, as heard in tracks from her 2024 album She Reaches Out to She Reaches Out to She.[83] More recently, she has shifted toward modular analog synths, utilizing an extensive wall of modules in collaborative sessions to warp guitar and vocal inputs into novel, cinematic textures.[83] Wolfe's amplifier choices emphasize tube-driven warmth and headroom, with the Fender Bassbreaker 45 head and combo configurations forming the core of her studio and live tones since around 2016 for their punchy overdrive and clarity.[84][80] She pairs these with a pedalboard featuring fuzz and reverb pedals to craft her signature doom-laden atmospheres; the Death By Audio Apocalypse fuzz delivers massive, saturated distortion for heavy riffs, while the MXR M300 Reverb and DigiTech Supernatural Reverb provide expansive, ethereal tails.[80][85][79] Additional effects like the EarthQuaker Devices Talons overdrive add grit and sustain, enabling dynamic shifts from sparse to overwhelming volumes.[79] Her recording setup has evolved from lo-fi beginnings in her father's home studio near Sacramento, where she experimented with basic multitracking as a teenager, to a professional home studio in Northern California for intimate projects like Birth of Violence.[72][81] For heavier productions, such as Hiss Spun, she collaborates at Kurt Ballou's GodCity Studio in Salem, Massachusetts, leveraging its vintage gear for raw, high-fidelity captures.[67][86] Software like Ableton Live supports her electronic elements, used by collaborator Ben Chisholm for vocal manipulations, MIDI integrations, and arrangement refinements.[87][66][88] On tour, Wolfe's live rig centers around custom configurations of her core guitars—the Gibson ES-335, a hollowbody Gretsch, and Taylor acoustics—routed through the Fender Bassbreaker and pedalboard for consistent tonal translation from studio to stage.[89] Post-2020 performances increasingly incorporate pre-recorded backing tracks to augment her band, allowing for layered synths and percussion that enhance the immersive quality of her shows without overwhelming the live instrumentation.[90]Discography
Solo studio albums
Chelsea Wolfe's solo studio albums span a range of styles from folk-doom to industrial and synth elements, marking her evolution as a songwriter and performer. Her debut efforts established an underground presence, while later releases expanded her sound with orchestral and electronic production, achieving modest commercial success on specialized charts. The following table summarizes her full-length solo studio albums, including key release details and chart performance where applicable.| Album | Release Date | Label | Tracks | Peak Chart Positions | Brief Context |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| The Grime and the Glow | December 28, 2010 | Pendu Sound | 10 | None | This debut album introduced Wolfe's underground folk-doom style, recorded on a portable eight-track with minimal production.[91][92] |
| Apokalypsis | August 23, 2011 | Pendu Sound | 9 | None | Exploring apocalyptic themes through gothic rock and ethereal wave, the album built on her raw, haunting aesthetic.[93][94] |
| Pain Is Beauty | August 20, 2013 | Sargent House | 12 | US Heatseekers #22; US Folk #25 | Featuring orchestral expansions and electronic elements, this album marked Wolfe's shift toward broader sonic palettes and her first chart entry.[95] |
| Abyss | August 7, 2015 | Sargent House | 9 | US Billboard 200 #130; US Alternative #22 | Delving into neofolk depths with distorted doom guitar and themes of isolation, it was produced by John Congleton and achieved her highest US chart debut.[96][5] |
| Hiss Spun | September 22, 2017 | Sargent House | 10 | UK Independent #14 | Incorporating industrial metal influences and recorded with Converge's Kurt Ballou, the album emphasized heavy, introspective aggression.[24][97] |
| Birth of Violence | October 23, 2019 | Sargent House | 9 | UK Albums #96 | A return to acoustic focus with folk and chamber elements, reflecting themes of feminine energy, renewal, and connection to the earth.[98][99] |
| She Reaches Out to She Reaches Out to She | February 9, 2024 | Loma Vista | 10 | UK Independent #3 | Embracing synth-pop and trip-hop textures, this work produced by Dave Sitek explores transformation and future selves through electronic introspection.[100][101] |