Washed Out
Washed Out is the stage name of Ernest Weatherly Greene Jr., an American singer, songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, and record producer best known as a pioneer of the chillwave genre, characterized by dreamy, lo-fi electronic soundscapes blending synth-pop, ambient, and nostalgic elements.[1][2] Born in Perry, Georgia, on October 3, 1982, Greene grew up in rural Georgia before studying and working at university libraries in the South, including a position in the reference department at the University of South Carolina, where he began experimenting with music as a bedroom project during a period of unemployment in 2009.[3][4][5] His debut EPs, High Times and Life of Leisure (both 2009), quickly gained attention for tracks like "Feel It All Around," which later became the theme for the TV series Portlandia, establishing Washed Out as a key figure in the early 2010s chillwave movement.[1][6] Greene's full-length debut, Within and Without (2011), expanded his sound with more polished production on Sub Pop Records, followed by Paracosm (2013), which drew inspiration from his childhood home and earned critical acclaim for its organic, psych-folk influences.[7][8] Subsequent releases include the EP Mister Mellow (2017), the soundtrack album Purple Noon (2020) for the short film of the same name, and his fifth studio album Notes from a Quiet Life (2024), which explores themes of introspection and the passage of time while incorporating live instrumentation and drawing on Greene's visual art practice.[2][9] Often dubbed the "godfather of chillwave" by critics, Greene's work has influenced indie electronic music, with his immersive, evocative style continuing to evolve through collaborations, live performances, and multimedia projects following his 2021 relocation to a rural Georgia farm.[2][10]Biography
Early life and education
Ernest Weatherly Greene Jr. was born on October 3, 1982, in Perry, Georgia. He grew up in a middle-class household in the rural outskirts of Perry, where his parents resided in a home surrounded by peach orchards. His family provided an early foundation in music through exposure to rock 'n' roll records, which contrasted with the electronic and ambient sounds he later explored.[11][12] During his childhood and high school years in Perry, Greene developed an interest in music by jamming casually with friends, treating it primarily as a hobby rather than a serious pursuit. He attended local schools but did not participate in formal school bands, instead engaging in informal music-making that sparked his creative curiosity. This period laid the groundwork for his later experimentation, though professional ambitions remained distant.[13] Greene pursued higher education at the University of Georgia, earning an undergraduate degree in the early 2000s. During his time in Athens, he began experimenting with DIY recording as a side interest amid his studies, immersing himself in the campus's vibrant music scene through informal listening and home setups. He later moved to Columbia, South Carolina, to obtain a Master of Library and Information Science degree from the University of South Carolina in 2009. While in graduate school, Greene continued his musical hobbies, producing tracks in bedroom studios as a creative outlet to unwind from academics.[14][15][16] After completing his master's, Greene returned to his parents' home in Perry amid a challenging job market for library professionals and remained unemployed for a period, which allowed flexible time to refine his home recording experiments using basic equipment. He later took a short-term position as a library assistant before transitioning to music full-time. This post-college phase, marked by non-music employment and self-taught production, marked the transition from hobbyist to emerging artist.[14][11][16]Personal life
Ernest Greene, known professionally as Washed Out, married his high school sweetheart, Blair Sexton, in 2009 after meeting in Perry, Georgia.[13][17] The couple, who began dating in 1999, have maintained a close partnership throughout Greene's career, with Blair initially contributing to visual and promotional aspects of his projects before shifting focus to family responsibilities.[18][13] Greene and his wife have three sons: Miles (born October 2015), Sid (born 2018), and Owen (born April 23, 2023).[18] The family decided to start having children around 2015, when Blair stepped back from collaborative work to prioritize parenting, a decision that reshaped their daily routines around the children's needs.[13] Fatherhood has introduced a structured schedule for Greene, limiting his creative work to a 9-to-5 routine to accommodate school activities and family time, providing what he describes as a "healthy reset" from professional demands.[19] Beyond music, Greene pursues visual arts as a personal passion, creating large-scale, non-commercial sculptures on his property inspired by art history and visits to sites like the Storm King Art Center.[19] He also engages in reading about art and maintains separate studios for these pursuits, emphasizing a deliberate, time-intensive process separate from his musical output.[19] Outdoor activities in rural settings form another key interest, allowing him to build workshops and foster an environment that echoes the small-town upbringing he shared with his own children.[19] Greene has navigated personal challenges, including early creative burnout from balancing touring and production with emerging family life, which prompted relocations within Georgia to find stability.[13] These periods highlighted the difficulties of maintaining work-life equilibrium, leading to intentional choices like limiting professional commitments to preserve family intimacy.[13] In terms of community involvement, Greene has expressed interest in supporting music education programs in Georgia, drawing inspiration from the Otis Redding Foundation's efforts to nurture young local talent.[13] As of 2025, Greene resides with his family on a 20-acre rural property named Endymion in Macon, Georgia, near his hometown of Perry, embracing a quiet, introspective lifestyle that prioritizes privacy, family, and personal creative exploration away from urban centers.[18][19] This move in 2021 provided the space for both family growth and individual hobbies, reflecting a deliberate return to roots after earlier stints in Athens, Atlanta, and Decatur.[13][19]Musical career
2009–2011: Formation and breakthrough
In 2009, Ernest Greene adopted the moniker Washed Out for his solo music project, creating lo-fi home recordings characterized by blurred synthpop sounds in his bedroom setup.[20] These initial tracks captured a woozy, evocative aesthetic that quickly drew attention in the emerging indie scene. Greene's EPs, including his debut High Times (July 14, 2009, limited cassette) and follow-up Life of Leisure (September 8, 2009), were released via Mexican Summer, featuring hazy, nostalgic compositions built from sampled elements and reverb-drenched vocals.[21][1] The standout track "Feel It All Around" from Life of Leisure gained viral traction after being selected as the theme song for the IFC sketch comedy series Portlandia in 2011, cementing its status as a chillwave staple.[21] Following the EP's success, Greene signed with Sub Pop Records in April 2011, marking a pivotal step toward broader recognition.[22] He then recorded his debut full-length album, Within and Without, in collaboration with contributors including drummer Greg Weiss and multi-instrumentalist Van Pierszalowski, expanding on his lo-fi roots with more polished production while retaining ethereal, introspective layers.[23] Released on July 12, 2011, the album debuted at number 26 on the Billboard 200, showcasing tracks like "Amor Fati" that blended dreamy electronics with subtle emotional depth.[24] Greene transitioned from bedroom producer to live performer with his first show at a CMJ showcase in October 2009, followed by appearances in small venues like Santos Party House in New York.[25] His early tours escalated to festival slots, including a set at the 2010 Pitchfork Music Festival, where he engaged audiences with live renditions of his atmospheric material.[26] Alongside contemporaries like Toro y Moi, Washed Out helped define the chillwave genre through its sun-soaked, nostalgic vibe, earning Greene the title "godfather of chillwave" from Pitchfork for pioneering the sound's hazy synth textures and laid-back ethos.[2]2012–2016: Paracosm and mid-career projects
Following the success of his debut album Within and Without, Ernest Greene, performing as Washed Out, began developing material for his sophomore effort, Paracosm, drawing inspiration from fantasy literature and outsider art to create an immersive, escapist sound. Influenced by the elaborate imaginary worlds of authors like C.S. Lewis and J.R.R. Tolkien, as well as the intricate illustrations of artist Henry Darger, Greene aimed to evoke a sense of daydreaming and personal retreat amid the pressures of post-breakthrough fame.[27][28] This conceptual foundation led him to record the album in 2012 at Maze Studios in Atlanta with returning producer Ben H. Allen III, emphasizing a shift toward organic, analog production techniques.[29] Released on August 13, 2013, via Sub Pop Records, Paracosm marked a departure from the electronic haze of chillwave toward lush, tactile instrumentation, incorporating live drums, guitars, harps, bongos, and field recordings like chirping birds and laughter for a more vibrant, daytime psychedelia.[8] Critics praised this evolution, with Pitchfork awarding it a 7.4 out of 10 and highlighting Greene's growth as a singer-songwriter capable of blending reverb-soaked warmth with human imperfections.[8] The album's lead single, "Entrance," served as an instrumental opener that set a serene tone, while tracks like "It All Feels Right" exemplified the record's focus on fleeting, joyful moments, bridging his earlier dream pop elements with newfound acoustic depth.[30] To support Paracosm, Greene assembled a live band for the first time, enabling fuller performances that translated the album's layered textures to the stage during an extensive 2013-2014 tour.[31] This included dates across North America and a European leg visiting cities like Helsinki, Stockholm, Copenhagen, Amsterdam, and London, where audiences responded to reimagined versions of older material alongside new songs.[32] International expansion extended to Asia with shows in Japan and South Korea in 2014, solidifying Washed Out's global presence amid growing demand.[33] Amid this period of maturation, Greene engaged in select collaborations and side projects, including a remix of My Morning Jacket's "Outta My System" released in 2012, which infused the track with his signature hazy electronics.[34] These efforts allowed creative experimentation outside album cycles, though Greene later reflected on challenges like intense label expectations for rapid output and the toll of relentless touring, which strained his perfectionist tendencies and prompted a refinement of his process to prioritize emotional authenticity over hype.[27] By 2016, this transitional phase had honed his artistry, setting the stage for further evolution while maintaining subtle dream pop undercurrents in his sound.[8]2017–2020: Mister Mellow and Purple Noon
In 2017, Ernest Greene signed with Stones Throw Records, marking a departure from his previous label affiliation, and released the album Mister Mellow on June 30.[35][36] The project incorporated elements of 1990s hip-hop production techniques, including jazz samples, alongside house, free jazz, and hip-hop influences, creating a laid-back, instrumental-heavy sound.[37][38] Accompanied by a visual album component on DVD, Mister Mellow explored themes of relaxation and escapism, immersing listeners in a narrative world of mellow introspection through spoken-word interludes and dreamy soundscapes.[39][40] The album's lead single, "Get Lost," was released on May 26, 2017, introducing a more energetic edge to Greene's signature style while previewing the record's soulful, psychedelic undertones.[41] In 2018, Washed Out released additional singles including "Face Up" (later included on Purple Noon), and "Don't Wanna" and "Step Back" (bonus tracks on the High Times EP reissue), further exploring electronic and chillwave elements.[42][43][44] By 2020, Greene returned to Sub Pop Records for Purple Noon, released on August 7 amid the COVID-19 pandemic, which limited traditional touring but aligned with the album's escapist themes.[45] Self-written, recorded, and produced entirely by Greene, the record featured mixing by longtime collaborator Ben H. Allen III and drew inspiration from a trip to Greece, evoking Mediterranean coastlines with lush, balearic-influenced synthpop arrangements.[46][47] The title referenced the 1960 French film Plein Soleil (also known as Purple Noon), capturing a sense of sun-drenched reverie.[48] Singles from Purple Noon included "Too Late" in April 2020 and "Time to Walk Away" in June, both highlighting the album's streamlined, radio-friendly melodies amid heightened streaming consumption during lockdowns.[49][50] The release underscored a continued evolution toward more accessible synthpop elements, building on the digital production focus of Greene's mid-career work.[2]2021–present: Notes from a Quiet Life and ongoing work
Following the release of Purple Noon in 2020, Ernest Greene, the creative force behind Washed Out, entered a period of hiatus to step back from the demands of the music industry and focus on family life.[10] Influenced by a desire to reconnect with his rural roots, Greene relocated with his family from Atlanta to Endymion, a 20-acre former horse farm in rural Georgia near his hometown of Perry, where he built a home studio in a barn.[51] This move allowed him to work at a deliberate pace, prioritizing personal reflection amid the quiet of the countryside.[10] In May 2024, Washed Out announced Notes from a Quiet Life, his fifth studio album, set for release on June 28 via Sub Pop Records.[52] Entirely self-produced by Greene with mixing assistance from Nathan Boddy and David Wrench, the album explores themes of introspection, personal transformation, and the serenity of domestic life.[53] Leading singles included "The Hardest Part," released on May 2 with an AI-generated music video, and "Waking Up," which debuted shortly before as the album's opener.[54] The album drew inspiration from Greene's experiences on the farm, evoking a sense of pastoral calm, as well as visual artists such as Cy Twombly, Henry Moore, Donald Judd, and Barbara Hepworth, whose abstract and sculptural works informed its organic, evocative soundscapes.[10] Critics praised the record's lush synth arrangements and emotional resonance, with Pitchfork noting its "punchy snares and widemouth synth bass" that lend a stately quality to tracks like "Got Your Back," though some found the overall delivery plain-spoken and less dynamic than prior efforts.[55] Beats Per Minute highlighted the "lush synth tones and distant vocals" that provide a fresh edge to Greene's compositions.[56] To support Notes from a Quiet Life, Washed Out embarked on a North American tour in 2024, featuring opening acts like Wild Nothing and Babehoven, with dates spanning summer festivals such as Just Like Heaven and Day In Day Out.[57] Select performances, including the November 4 show at The Ogden Theatre in Denver, were live-streamed via nugs.net for broader accessibility.[58] Into 2025, Greene has continued adapting to the streaming era through digital releases, including a reissue of Life of Leisure on November 7, 2025, and virtual engagements, while hinting at potential explorations in visual media collaborations tied to his interdisciplinary interests.[59][60]Artistry
Musical style
Washed Out's music exemplifies the core hallmarks of chillwave, a genre pioneered by Ernest Greene in the late 2000s, characterized by hazy, lo-fi aesthetics that evoke a sense of nostalgic detachment. Central to this sound are washed-out vocals heavily treated with reverb and delay to create an ethereal, distant quality, paired with reverb-drenched synthesizers and tape-warped samples that impart a warped, analog warmth. These elements combine to form humid, groovy textures reminiscent of stoner tunes, often built around dreamy, nostalgic soundscapes using electronic production techniques like drum machines and lo-fi approximations.[61][62][63] Throughout his discography, Greene's style has evolved from the ambient and dream pop leanings of his early releases—emphasizing diffuse, atmospheric layers—to a more structured synthpop and indie electronic approach in later works, incorporating polished rhythms and organic instrumentation. Early productions drew on bedroom-recorded simplicity with a focus on immersion through blurred sonic boundaries, while subsequent albums shifted toward hi-fi precision, precise mixing, and reactive layering to build cohesive sonic universes. This progression reflects a consistent reinvention of the "Washed Out sound," maintaining an intuitive palette of synth-heavy, psychedelic ambiance while adapting to broader electronic influences.[8][7][19] Greene's production methods rely on home recording setups in isolated environments, such as his rural Georgia studio, where he experiments with analog synthesizers and improvises layers to achieve immersive depth. Vocals are delivered in falsetto with an ethereal tone, frequently processed via reverb and other effects to enhance a sense of spatial immersion and emotional remove. Rhythmically, his tracks feature mid-tempo grooves that merge laid-back, hip-hop-inspired beats with shoegaze-like textural haze, creating a danceable yet relaxed foundation. Although sharing affinities with Balearic beat's lush, escapist vibes, Washed Out's output remains anchored in indie rock's melodic introspection and experimental ethos.[19][25][2]Influences and themes
Washed Out, the project of Ernest Greene, draws heavily from ambient and shoegaze traditions in his musical influences. Greene has cited Brian Eno's ambient works as a foundational inspiration, particularly through explorations of ambient music history that trace its evolution from classical composers to modern electronic forms.[64] Shoegaze elements, including hazy vocals and layered textures, reflect the impact of 1990s bands like My Bloody Valentine, which Greene has explicitly referenced as shaping his vocal approach.[65] Additionally, 1980s synth pop and dream pop evoke comparisons to acts like Cocteau Twins in tracks like "Weightless," with its soapy, atmospheric depth blending nostalgic synth lines.[8] Beyond music, Greene's work incorporates non-musical inspirations from visual arts, literature, and film. Sculptors like Cy Twombly and Henry Moore have influenced his recent output, evoking organic forms and abstract introspection in the sculptural quality of albums like Notes from a Quiet Life.[10] Books on ambient history, such as those by David Toop, have guided Greene's understanding of sound as an environmental and emotional medium, emphasizing its roots in everyday resonance.[64] For the 2020 album Purple Noon, Greene drew from Italian thrillers, specifically René Clément's 1960 film Plein Soleil (released as Purple Noon in English), which inspired its sun-soaked, obsessive themes of desire and escape.[48] Recurring themes in Washed Out's music center on escapism, nostalgia, love, and quiet introspection, often portraying idealized retreats from reality. Early works evoke a hazy, youthful daydreaming, as in the chillwave-era tracks that romanticize lo-fi romance and fleeting moments.[48] Over time, these motifs have evolved toward family, serenity, and mature reflection, particularly in later releases like the 2024 album Notes from a Quiet Life, which shifts from escapist fantasy to grounded appreciation of domestic simplicity and emotional uplift.[52] This progression mirrors Greene's personal growth, blending Southern U.S. roots—such as Georgia's humid, introspective landscapes—with global electronic sounds to create a uniquely serene hybrid.[13] Greene's visual style complements these themes through collaborative music videos and album artwork featuring pastel colors, dreamy landscapes, and handmade aesthetics. Projects like the 2017 visual album Mister Mellow pair tracks with bespoke animations and footage that emphasize blurred, nostalgic imagery, reacting against polished digital production in favor of tactile, imperfect visuals.[66]Discography
Studio albums
Washed Out's debut studio album, Within and Without, was released on July 12, 2011, by Sub Pop. Produced by Ernest Greene and Ben H. Allen, the 10-track record marked Greene's transition from bedroom recordings to a more polished chillwave sound, featuring hazy synths and ethereal vocals. It debuted at number 26 on the Billboard 200 chart.[67][68][69][70] The second studio album, Paracosm, arrived on August 13, 2013, also via Sub Pop. Co-produced by Greene and Ben H. Allen, it consists of 11 tracks emphasizing live instrumentation like acoustic guitars and organic percussion, shifting toward a warmer, more immersive dream pop aesthetic.[12][8][71]- Mister Mellow*, Washed Out's third studio album, was released on June 30, 2017, through Stones Throw Records. Self-produced by Greene, the 12-track LP incorporates jazz-infused elements with smooth synths and lounge-like grooves, presented as a visual album with accompanying animations.[38][40]
Extended plays
Washed Out's extended plays primarily consist of early releases that established his signature chillwave aesthetic, blending lo-fi production with hazy, nostalgic synths and samples. High Times, released on September 15, 2009, via Mirror Universe Tapes as a limited cassette tape edition of 100 copies, served as the project's initial mixtape-style outing with 13 short tracks such as "Belong," "Good Luck," and "Phone Call." This self-recorded collection captured Ernest Greene's bedroom experimentation during a period of unemployment, emphasizing ambient loops and field recordings for a raw, intimate vibe.[75][76] The breakthrough Life of Leisure followed on September 8, 2009, through Mexican Summer, featuring six tracks including the standout "Feel It All Around," "New Theory," and "Hold Out." Clocking in at around 17 minutes, the EP marked Washed Out's wider introduction to the indie scene, with its sun-soaked, reverb-drenched sound gaining traction online and later propelling "Feel It All Around" as the opening theme for the IFC sketch series Portlandia from 2011 to 2018. Reissued on vinyl in various editions on November 7, 2025.[77][78][1][60] In 2011, Sub Pop issued Eyes Be Closed (Remixes) on July 5, consisting of four remixes of the title track from the debut album Within and Without, reimagined by artists like Small Black and Toro y Moi. This digital-only EP extended the song's dreamy pop core through varied electronic reinterpretations, highlighting collaborative elements in Washed Out's evolving production.[79]Singles
Washed Out has released several notable singles throughout his career, often serving as lead tracks for his albums and gaining attention through viral media placements and innovative visuals. These releases highlight his signature blend of dreamy synths and introspective lyrics, contributing to his prominence in indie and chillwave scenes.| Title | Release Date | Album Association | Chart Performance | Media Uses and Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Feel It All Around | July 2009 | Life of Leisure EP | Did not chart on major Billboard charts; peaked at No. 13 on Mexico Ingles Airplay | Featured as the opening theme for the IFC sketch comedy series Portlandia starting in 2011, which propelled its popularity and helped define the chillwave genre. Released initially as a digital single before inclusion on the EP. [80] [81] |
| Amor Fati | July 2011 | Within and Without | Did not chart on major Billboard charts | Lead single from the debut studio album, released digitally via Sub Pop; praised for its atmospheric production and philosophical title meaning "love of fate." [82] [83] |
| Don't Give Up | July 2013 | Paracosm | Did not chart on major Billboard charts | Second single from Paracosm, released with a music video featuring London Zoo animal footage; emphasizes themes of perseverance amid the album's psychedelic exploration. [84] |
| The Hardest Part | May 2, 2024 | Notes from a Quiet Life | Did not chart on major Billboard charts | Lead single from the fifth studio album; accompanied by the first fully AI-generated music video using OpenAI's Sora tool, sparking discussions on technology in art. [85] |
| Running Away | May 30, 2024 | Notes from a Quiet Life | Did not chart on major Billboard charts | Promotional single from the fifth studio album, released with an accompanying music video. [86] |
| Waking Up | June 13, 2024 | Notes from a Quiet Life | Did not chart on major Billboard charts | Promotional single from the fifth studio album, featured a live performance video during the April 8, 2024 solar eclipse. [87] |
Guest appearances
Washed Out, the project of Ernest Greene, has contributed to various artists' works through guest vocals, production, and remixes, often blending his signature hazy electronic style with collaborators' sounds. These appearances span indie, synth-pop, and alternative genres, showcasing Greene's versatility beyond his solo catalog. In 2012, Greene provided a remix for My Morning Jacket's track "Outta My System" from their album Circuital, infusing the song with dreamy synth layers and reverb-heavy production.[88] Greene featured as a guest vocalist on Toro y Moi's "Want" from the 2015 album What For?, delivering ethereal harmonies over Chaz Bear's funky, synth-driven groove.[89] For Roosevelt's 2018 album Young Romance, Greene contributed vocals to "Forgive," a polished synth-pop track that highlights his smooth, introspective delivery alongside Marius Lauber's upbeat production.[90] That same year, Greene remixed Rhye's "Softly" for the Blood Remixed EP, transforming the original's tender R&B into a more ambient, wave-like soundscape with subtle electronic pulses.[91] Greene co-produced Sudan Archives' debut album Athena in 2019, handling tracks like "Confessions" and "Nont For Sale," where he shaped the violinist's experimental R&B with lush, atmospheric arrangements.[92] In 2021, Greene contributed two original ambient lullabies, "Sidney's Lullaby" and "Miles' Lullaby," to Sub Pop's Singles Club Vol. 6 compilation, creating gentle, instrumental pieces inspired by his children.[93] Most recently, in 2022, Greene remixed Glass Animals' "Hot Sugar" from Dreamland (Irl Edition), adding swirling synths and a relaxed tempo to the track's psychedelic pop foundation.[94]| Year | Project | Role | Context |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2012 | My Morning Jacket – Circuital | Remix ("Outta My System") | Added hazy electronic elements to the rock band's album track. |
| 2015 | Toro y Moi – What For? | Guest vocals ("Want") | Provided harmonies on the synth-funk album. |
| 2018 | Roosevelt – Young Romance | Guest vocals ("Forgive") | Contributed to the synth-pop record's lead single. |
| 2018 | Rhye – Blood Remixed EP | Remix ("Softly") | Reimagined the R&B ballad with ambient textures. |
| 2019 | Sudan Archives – Athena | Co-producer (multiple tracks) | Shaped the experimental R&B debut album. |
| 2021 | Sub Pop Singles Club Vol. 6 | Original contributions ("Sidney's Lullaby," "Miles' Lullaby") | Ambient pieces for the label's subscription compilation. |
| 2022 | Glass Animals – Dreamland (Irl Edition) | Remix ("Hot Sugar") | Enhanced the psychedelic pop with dreamy synths. |