Nina Nastasia Announces First Album in 12 Years, Shares New Song: Listen

“Just Stay in Bed” arrives on Riderless Horse, which is out this summer

Nina Nastasia

Nina Nastasia (Photo by Theo Stanley)

Singer-songwriter Nina Nastasia has announced a new album, her first in a dozen years. It’s titled Riderless Horse, and Steve Albini produced the project. It’s out July 22 via Temporary Residence Ltd. She’s shared one song from the record with the news, “Just Stay in Bed.” Check it out below.

In a statement about the project, Nastasia notes that Riderless Horse is her first record not produced by her partner Kennan Gudjonsson, who died by suicide in January 2020. “Riderless Horse documents the grief, but it also marks moments of empowerment and a real happiness in discovering my own capability,” she wrote.

Riderless Horse arrives more than a decade after its predecessor, 2010’s Outlaster. Prior to that, she’d joined Dirty Three drummer Jim White for You Follow Me in 2007. Nastasia made the out-of-print Outlaster, You Follow Me, and 2006’s On Leaving available online for the first time earlier this year. She’s currently on a spring tour with Mogwai, which concludes in San Diego near the end of April.

This content can also be viewed on the site it originates from.

Nina Nastasia:

Riderless Horse is my first solo record, and it’s the first record my former partner, Kennan Gudjonsson, didn’t produce.

I haven’t made an album since 2010. I decided to stop pursuing music several years after my sixth record, Outlaster, because of unhappiness, overwhelming chaos, mental illness, and my tragically dysfunctional relationship with Kennan. Creating music had always been a positive outlet during difficult times, but eventually it became a source of absolute misery.

Kennan, a cat, and I lived in a studio apartment in NYC for 25 years, finding ways to survive while making records and going on tours. Our apartment was the place where people would come stay, eat, drink, play music, and use our tub. It was quite a home we had created, but it was decaying steadily from the moment we moved in, and in the end, it was as if black mold was growing beneath the surface, undetected, and the two of us were dying and getting too weak to ever leave. We loved each other. We were each other’s family, but there was ongoing abuse, control and manipulation. We hid. We didn’t want anyone to see how ugly things could get, so we increasingly isolated from our friends and family. We were lost.

On January 26, 2020, I made the decision to separate and live apart, and on January 27, Kennan died by suicide. What a thing, suicide. I can only feel sadness and guilt about it. Maybe I’ll have other reactions to it later on.

Riderless Horse documents the grief, but it also marks moments of empowerment and a real happiness in discovering my own capability. Steve Albini produced this record with me, and Greg Norman assisted. The three of us are old friends, and we did a field recording in a guesthouse built like a lighthouse that two very dear friends of mine have in Esopus, NY. It was exactly the right environment to work on this record. We all had meals together, cried, laughed, and told stories. It was perfect. It made me realize how much I love writing, playing and recording music.

Terrible things happen. These were some terrible things. So, what to do – learn something valuable, connect with people, move the fuck out of that apartment, remember the humor, find the humor, tell the truth, and make a record. I made a record.

Read also