Space Heavy
Space Heavy is the fourth studio album by English musician King Krule, the stage name of Archy Marshall, released on June 9, 2023, through Matador and XL Recordings.[1] The 15-track project marks a significant evolution in Marshall's discography, blending elements of post-punk, jazz, dub, and ambient grunge into a cohesive exploration of introspective and transitional states.[2] Primarily composed between 2020 and 2022 across London and Liverpool, the album was co-produced by Marshall and frequent collaborator Dilip Harris, with additional contributions from musicians including saxophonist Ignacio Salvadores, drummer George Bass, bassist James Wilson, and guitarist Jack Towell.[1] Thematically, Space Heavy grapples with love, newfound fatherhood, domesticity, and existential doubt, often framed through the metaphor of "the space between"—evoking lost connections, dreams of intimacy, and the fluidity of emotional landscapes.[2] Tracks like "Seaforth" and "Pink Shell" exemplify this with their mix of melancholic lyrics and dynamic instrumentation, shifting from lithe jazz-infused openings to paranoid post-punk energy.[3] Much of the album is written in C major, contributing to its live-sounding, clogged sonic texture that prioritizes vulnerability over polished production.[2] Released amid Marshall's ongoing artistic maturation, Space Heavy builds on the raw experimentation of prior works like The OOZ (2017) and 6 Feet Beneath the Moon (2013), while reflecting personal milestones such as his transition into parenthood.[2] The album's rollout included singles "Seaforth" (April 2023) and "If Only It Was Warmth" (May 2023), which previewed its blend of subdued introspection and rhythmic propulsion.[3] Critically, it has been noted for its immersive depth, capturing a post-pandemic sense of muted reflection and sonic expansiveness.[2]Background
Conception
The songs for Space Heavy were primarily written by Archy Marshall between 2020 and 2022, a period marked by frequent commutes via train between his homes in London and Liverpool, where he split his time during the COVID-19 pandemic.[4][5] These journeys provided Marshall with extended periods of reflection, allowing him to develop the album's material amid personal transitions, including his entry into fatherhood.[2] The album's conceptual foundation draws from Marshall's fascination with "the space between," a theme that probes the voids in relationships, the passage of time, and emotional distances, emerging as a narrative thread throughout the work.[6] This idea crystallized during the writing process, reflecting his experiences of migration and introspection between the two cities.[7] The album's title, tracklist, and June 9, 2023, release date were leaked by a French retailer in early April 2023, building anticipation ahead of the official announcement on April 13, 2023, which coincided with the release of the lead single "Seaforth".[8]Personal influences
Archy Marshall, known as King Krule, became a father to his daughter Marina in March 2019, an experience that profoundly shaped the emotional landscape of Space Heavy. This new role brought a sense of perspective and tenderness, influencing his writing with themes of love, protection, and doubt as he navigated the vulnerabilities of parenthood. In interviews, Marshall described how fatherhood altered his worldview, fostering a more considerate approach to his craft and infusing the album with warmth amid its inherent melancholy.[4][9][10] The album also draws from Marshall's reflections on romantic partnerships, marked by loss and existential uncertainty, particularly during the isolation of the COVID-19 pandemic. Having relocated to Liverpool before the lockdowns, Marshall experienced profound loneliness that echoed through his personal relationships, prompting introspection on co-dependency and emotional dissolution. These dynamics, compounded by the abrupt cancellation of his 2020 tour, led to a period of emotional reevaluation, where he grappled with feelings of inadequacy and the fragility of connections in uncertain times.[11][10][4] Space Heavy represents a pivotal evolution in Marshall's artistry, shifting from the sprawling, experimental melancholy of his 2017 album The OOZ toward a more concise and optimistic expression, even as it retains undercurrents of doubt. This maturation reflects lessons absorbed from prior works, emphasizing authentic emotion over theatrical despair and incorporating rays of hope derived from personal growth. Much of the material emerged during his routine train commutes between London and Liverpool, a peripatetic lifestyle that mirrored the album's themes of flux and independence.[11][9][10]Production
Recording process
The recording of Space Heavy took place primarily in studios located in London and Liverpool, following the initial writing phase, with additional sessions dedicated to refining demos originally sketched during the artist's commutes between these cities.[4] These locations facilitated a collaborative environment that captured the album's evolving sound, drawing on the transitional energy of travel for inspiration in the refinement process.[4] The album was written and recorded between 2020 and 2022, with recording completed by fall 2022 to finalize the 15-track album, ensuring a cohesive structure within a runtime of approximately 45 minutes suitable for a single vinyl disc.[4] [1] This timeline allowed for iterative development without extending into prolonged production, prioritizing efficiency to preserve the material's immediacy.[4] The sessions emphasized live instrumentation layering to build the album's texture, incorporating jazz-infused improvisations that added organic spontaneity alongside bursts of post-punk energy for rhythmic drive.[4] Minimal overdubs were employed throughout, maintaining a raw, unpolished feel that highlighted the band's real-time interactions under the guidance of producer Dilip Harris.[4] This approach limited takes to essential performances, avoiding excess to retain dynamic precision in the final mixes.[4]Collaborators
The album Space Heavy was produced by Archy Marshall (under his King Krule moniker) alongside his frequent collaborator Dilip Harris, who played a pivotal role in expanding Marshall's initial compositions into complete arrangements.[5][12] The core band featured long-time members Ignacio Salvadores on saxophone, George Bass on drums, additional vocals, and harmonium, James Wilson on bass, and Jack Towell on guitar, providing jazz-inflected elements and rhythmic drive across the record.[5][1][13] Additional personnel included drum programming by Andy Ramsay and Dilip Harris, with Ramsay also handling engineering duties.[13] Other contributors encompassed string arrangements by Sean O'Hagan for select tracks, such as cello by Chris Fish on "When Vanishing."[13] These efforts took shape during sessions split between London and Liverpool from 2020 to 2022.[5]Composition
Musical style
Space Heavy fuses post-punk, jazz, creating a sonic palette that blends grimy dub influences with trip-hop rhythms and rainy-day jazz improvisation.[2][14] This genre blend manifests in woozy reverb-drenched textures and blue notes that evoke a subterranean atmosphere, where clogged frequencies and vaporous transitions form grimy pools of sound.[2] The album's production emphasizes ambient grunge and expressionistic abstraction, subverting conventional harmonies with tortured arpeggios and a gorgeously inhospitable tone.[2] Instrumentation centers on prominent saxophone, guitar, and drums, with the saxophone—played by Ignacio Salvadores—delivering contorted, growling lines that add emotional heft to the mix.[2][14] Tracks like "Flimsier" highlight lithe jazzy chords on delicately picked guitar, establishing a creaking, melancholic lament, while "Pink Shell" channels paranoid post-punk twitchiness through jagged rock riffs and dancey breakdowns.[15][2] Synths and brass further enrich the eclectic layers, as heard in the hypnotic symphony of "When Vanishing" and the nocturnal thump of drums in "Wednesday Overcast."[15][16] Spanning 15 tracks over 44 minutes, the album employs shorter, repetitive songs with loose structures to craft a fluid, dream-like journey that segues seamlessly between moods.[17] This approach prioritizes atmospheric beds of sound and slick progressions, fostering a sense of introspection amid themes of love and doubt.[16][15] The overall arc shifts from tentative optimism in opening cuts to deepening melancholy, unified by a nocturnal, lethargic vibe that rewards repeated listens.[2]Lyrical themes
The lyrics of Space Heavy revolve around central motifs of love, fatherhood, existential doubt, and loss, as Archy Marshall grapples with the emotional weight of newfound responsibilities during a period of pandemic-era isolation.[2] In tracks like "Hamburgerphobia," Marshall explores love in a disoriented "fugue state" intertwined with the demands of parenting, reflecting both its rewards and the sense of displacement it brings.[2] Existential doubt permeates songs such as "Wednesday Overcast," where fatalistic melancholy underscores the fragility of connections, while loss manifests in disintegrating relationships depicted through spatial voids and emotional vacuums, as in "Flimsier."[2] This reckoning is framed against the backdrop of pandemic-induced solitude, amplifying themes of physical and emotional distance in a muted, introspective manner.[18] Marshall's songwriting style employs a stream-of-consciousness delivery with hastily emotive phrasing, allowing raw, unfiltered thoughts to unfold in a spontaneous flow that mirrors the album's themes of transience.[19] This approach grounds abstract emotions in concrete details, such as fleeting encounters or urban commutes, creating a narrative intimacy despite the brevity of lines. For instance, "Seaforth" captures relational gaps through its apocalyptic imagery of lovers adrift amid a dying world, emphasizing disconnection in simple, urgent declarations.[20] Similarly, "When Vanishing" evokes an euphoric escape via its drifting, cloud-like progression, offering a momentary reprieve from heavier burdens through mellow, unhurried reflection.[18] These elements draw briefly on jazz and post-punk influences in their improvisational, fragmented delivery, enhancing the lyrical urgency without overt structural rigidity.[18] Compared to Marshall's prior albums, Space Heavy introduces more notes of hope and warmth, evolving from the denser despair of works like The OOZ toward a balance of sombre meditation and subtle optimism.[18] This shift is evident in closing lines like "A lot has changed / Now a lot means to me" from "Wednesday Overcast," which hint at growth amid isolation, yearning for connection in tracks such as "If Only It Was Warmth."[18] While doubt lingers, the lyrics temper their fatalism with emotional clarity, marking a mature progression that prioritizes quiet resilience over unrelenting melancholy.[2]Artwork and formats
Cover art
The cover art for Space Heavy originated from an initial sketch by Archy Marshall on a receipt, depicting a monolith in a desert or sea setting, which was then completed by his brother, Jack Marshall.[21] The visual design features a landscape resembling the surface of Mars or an asteroid.[22] Certain vinyl editions incorporate lenticular effects on accompanying postcards, adding depth and reinforcing the thematic sense of emptiness and expansiveness.[23]Release formats
Space Heavy was released on June 9, 2023, in multiple formats including digital download, compact disc (CD), and vinyl LP, comprising 15 tracks with a total duration of 44 minutes and 43 seconds.[24][1] The standard digital edition became available immediately upon release through streaming platforms such as Spotify and Apple Music, as well as for purchase on Bandcamp, allowing fans to access high-quality audio files like MP3 and FLAC.[1][24] Physical standard releases included a black vinyl LP and a CD, both distributed by Matador Records in the United States and XL Recordings in the United Kingdom and Europe.[5][25] These formats featured the album's standard artwork and were widely available through retailers like Rough Trade and the labels' official stores.[26] Limited special editions offered enhanced collectible options, such as clear and grey vinyl LPs pressed in limited runs, accompanied by a lenticular postcard variant of the cover art.[27][28] These exclusive variants were initially sold through independent record shops and the labels' websites, emphasizing the album's thematic focus on spatial and visual depth.[29]Promotion and release
Singles
The lead single from Space Heavy, "Seaforth", was released on April 13, 2023, accompanied by a music video directed by Jocelyn Anquetil that features whimsical, endearing imagery of dogs and everyday scenes to evoke a sense of tender longing.[12][3] The track, co-written with Marina Marshall Patmore, introduces the album's introspective themes of love and isolation through its hazy, jazz-inflected production.[30] On May 18, 2023, King Krule released the second single, "If Only It Was Warmth", a stripped-back ballad that builds from sparse piano to swelling orchestration, reflecting on emotional vulnerability.[31][32] The accompanying video, self-directed by Archy Marshall, presents abstract, moody visuals of a solitary figure transporting a cactus through urban landscapes, aligning with the song's themes of fleeting warmth and introspection.[33][34] The third and final pre-release single, "Flimsier", arrived on June 6, 2023, just days before the album's full release, opening with delicate strings that evolve into a slowcore lament and marking it as a fan favorite due to its earlier circulation as a demo.[35][36] This track, developed with collaborators Dilip Harris and Ignacio Salvadores, exemplifies the album's blend of neo-psychedelia and emotional depth.[37] These singles were teased through social media snippets and live performances in the months leading up to the album, generating significant anticipation among fans for Space Heavy's exploration of personal and relational themes.[38]Tour dates
On May 1, 2023, King Krule announced the Space Heavy Tour, comprising dates across North America starting in July 2023, followed by European and UK shows beginning in October 2023. The tour was later extended into 2024 and 2025, including dates in South America, Asia, and European festivals.[39][40][41] The tour showcased King Krule performing alongside his longtime backing band, including saxophonist Ignacio Salvadores and drummer George Bass, with an emphasis on the rhythmic interplay of saxophone and drums in the live arrangements.[30][42] Setlists typically blended tracks from Space Heavy, such as the single "Flimsier," with material from prior albums like The OOZ and Man Alive!, creating a dynamic mix of new and established songs.[41][35] Notable performances included the tour's North American kickoff headlining First Avenue in Minneapolis on July 21, 2023; a sold-out show at Kings Theatre in Brooklyn on August 1, 2023; and a stop at the Hollywood Palladium in Los Angeles on September 24, 2023.[43][44][45]Reception
Critical reception
Space Heavy received generally favorable reviews from music critics upon its release in June 2023. On Metacritic, the album holds a score of 79 out of 100, based on 15 reviews, indicating "generally favorable" reception.[46] Album of the Year aggregates a critic score of 75 out of 100 from 23 reviews, with praise centered on its introspective qualities and sonic experimentation.[47] Critics lauded the album's emotional depth and its blend of post-punk energy with jazz-inflected elements, creating a fluid and immersive listening experience. Pitchfork highlighted how Archy Marshall, performing as King Krule, reckons with themes of love, newfound fatherhood, and existential doubt, delivering a work that feels both personal and sonically adventurous despite its occasional haziness.[2] The Arts Desk described it as a "sombre but surprisingly warm meditation on love, loss and space," noting the lighter guitar tones and shimmering production that evoke a sense of emotional warmth amid introspection.[48] Publications like NME and DIY praised its innovative soundscapes, which break new ground while maintaining Marshall's signature style.[47] Some reviewers, however, found the album muted and less dynamic compared to King Krule's earlier, more abrasive efforts. Pitchfork critiqued the production for its "clogged frequencies and sonic glop," which contribute to an oppressively dank atmosphere and limit the album's ambition.[2] Others, including Uncut and The Line of Best Fit, pointed to its hazy, stream-of-consciousness structure as uneven, lacking the focus or cathartic energy of prior releases like The OOZ.[47] A minority of reviews, such as one scoring it 50 out of 100, deemed it overly gloomy and deficient in the youthful messiness that defined Marshall's past work.[49]Commercial performance
Space Heavy, released on June 9, 2023, via Matador Records, achieved moderate commercial success upon its debut. In the United Kingdom, it peaked at number 18 on the Official Albums Chart and spent one week in the top 200.[50] The album demonstrated particular strength in physical and independent formats, reaching number 5 on the Official Independent Albums Chart, number 6 on the Official Physical Albums Chart, number 4 on the Official Vinyl Albums Chart, and number 3 on the Official Record Store Chart, with the latter seeing four weeks on the listing.[50] These placements highlight robust demand for vinyl and specialty retail editions, contributing to its overall market reception. Internationally, Space Heavy peaked at number 42 on the Billboard Top Album Sales chart in the United States, reflecting solid physical sales performance despite not cracking the Billboard 200.[51] The album has also seen strong digital engagement, amassing over 97 million streams on Spotify as of November 2025.[52] Among its tracks, "Flimsier" emerged as a streaming standout, surpassing 8 million plays on the platform.[53]Track listing and personnel
Track listing
All tracks are written by Archy Marshall, except where noted.[1]| No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | "Flimsier" | Marshall | 3:59 |
| 2. | "Pink Shell" | Marshall, Salvadores | 2:15 |
| 3. | "Seaforth" | Marshall, M. Marshall Patmore | 4:05 |
| 4. | "That Is My Life, That Is Yours" | Marshall | 3:11 |
| 5. | "Tortoise of Independency" | Marshall | 2:07 |
| 6. | "Empty Stomach Space Cadet" | Marshall | 2:07 |
| 7. | "If Only It Was Warmth" | Marshall | 3:17 |
| 8. | "More Than This" | Marshall | 2:08 |
| 9. | "Poor Insurance" | Marshall | 4:05 |
| 10. | "When Vanishing" | Marshall | 3:39 |
| 11. | "Space Heavy" | Marshall | 2:41 |
| 12. | "Our Love Is the Place the Space Between" | Marshall | 2:34 |
| 13. | "Undergrowth" | Marshall | 2:50 |
| 14. | "Wednesday Overcast" | Marshall | 2:47 |
| 15. | "Fine Not Fine" | Marshall | 2:58 |
Credits
ProductionSpace Heavy was produced by Archy Marshall (performing as King Krule) and Dilip Harris. All tracks were recorded by Andy Ramsay, with additional engineering contributions from Archy Marshall, Bob MacKenzie, Dilip Harris, Freddie Nice, and James Wells. Mixing was handled by Archy Marshall and Dilip Harris, while mastering was performed by Matt Colton at Metropolis Mastering. Performance
- Archy Marshall: vocals, guitar, bass
- Ignacio Salvadores: saxophone, bass, clarinet, flute, guitar, vibraphone, additional vocals
- George Bass: drums, harmonium, additional vocals
- Dilip Harris: additional drum programming
- Andy Ramsay: additional drum programming
- Sean O'Hagan: string arrangement
- Chris Fish: cello
- Additional performers include Tara Lily (additional vocals on select tracks), Jack Towell (guitar and additional vocals on "Space Heavy"), Bob MacKenzie (strings on "When Vanishing"), and Freddie Nice (space noises on "Wednesday Overcast").
The album's artwork was created by Jack Marshall.[22] Label
Space Heavy was released by Matador Records in the United States and XL Recordings in the United Kingdom and European Union.