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DEVIN SHAFFER - Patience LP
âI keep thinking about this idea that once you think youâre on the path, youâve lost the path,â says New York musician Devin Shaffer, explaining the ethos behind Patience, her first studio album. âThere is no certainty, there is no knowing. Itâs all about surrender.â Written between 2021 and 2023 and Shafferâs move from Chicago to New York City, Patience mirrors lifeâs highs and lows on the search for spiritual meaning, purpose, and connection. For the first time, Shaffer leads a group of sensitive instrumentalistsâLucy Liyou on piano, Sarah Galdes (LâRain, Bartees Strange) on drums, Marilu Donovan (LEYA) on harp, and Mari Rubio (More Eaze) on pedal steelâthrough a stirring, hushed collection of folk songs. On Patience, Shaffer challenges both herself and the listener to find peace in the unknowing and comfort in the surrender.
Patience takes on the hushed intimacy of songwriters like Vashti Bunyan, Sibylle Baier, and Linda Perhacs and updates it for the twenty-first century. After releasing her debut LP, In My Dreams Iâm There in 2021, Shaffer found a discarded Martin acoustic guitar on the side of the road with a note that read, âThis is for you.â âIn the past, my songs were very much woven into this greater ambient soundscape,â explains Shaffer. âSongs would emerge from ambient drift and archival audio. When I had more traditional songs, I never really let them sit on their own.â But she took the guitar as an invitation to strip down her songwriting practice. Shaffer began writing a series of whispered folk songs from her bed, tracked vocals and guitar with Michael Macdonald (The Slaps, Tenci, Mia Joy, Tasha) at Bim Bom Studios in Chicago, and invited her collaborators to record on them. After arranging their contributions, Shaffer brought the music to La Frette Studios in France, the esteemed 100-year-old mansion-turned-recording studio, for mixing sessions with engineer Anthony Cazade (Fontaines D.C., BallakĂ© Sissoko) and Jordan Reyes (ONO, The Ark of Teeth).
Patience foregrounds Shafferâs acoustic guitar and voiceâtender, haunting, and controlledâusing her arrangements to conjure atmosphere. The opening track, a near-silent field recording taken from the windowsill of Shafferâs Brooklyn bedroom, fades into the first soft fingerpicked notes of her guitar on âForever,â bridging the gap between Shafferâs earlier work and the clarity of Patience. While Shaffer yearns for permanence in the first few lines of âForever,â as Liyouâs twinkling piano emerges, she changes her tune, instead finding comfort, even strength, in accepting change as it comes. âAll My Dreams Are Coming Trueâ unifies biting sarcasm (âIâve been pacing back and forth for so long I think itâs a sportâ) with an upbeat, folk rock beat, before transitioning with an interlude to âAnyoneâ: a waltz with a Galdes shuffle, light piano flourishes from Liyou and lyrics that are gentle yet defiant (âIâm in the spring of my life, Iâm in the zone againâ).
Patience oscillates between high and low, between certainty and uncertainty. The penultimate track, âI Guess Iâm Crawling,â acts as a thesis statement. Shafferâs guitar is right up front, her vocals gentle, like sheâs singing a lullaby. But she sings of inconveniences, mistakes, shortcomings, unfairnesses, doubts herself. âDo you believe in me, fifty paces up ahead?â she asks. âTrudging up a mountain, broken body, quicksand bed.â This is where patience comes in: as she sings, âitâs the only trick I know.â By the end of the track, a deal is made: âI guess I lay down by the pond. Joy in music, all night long. I guess Iâm crawling.â All of these supposed failures, Shaffer suggests, lead you to where youâre supposed to be. Though her newest songs navigate optimism and pessimism, hope and defeat, frustration and acceptance, on Patience, Shaffer has never sounded so sure.
Patience takes on the hushed intimacy of songwriters like Vashti Bunyan, Sibylle Baier, and Linda Perhacs and updates it for the twenty-first century. After releasing her debut LP, In My Dreams Iâm There in 2021, Shaffer found a discarded Martin acoustic guitar on the side of the road with a note that read, âThis is for you.â âIn the past, my songs were very much woven into this greater ambient soundscape,â explains Shaffer. âSongs would emerge from ambient drift and archival audio. When I had more traditional songs, I never really let them sit on their own.â But she took the guitar as an invitation to strip down her songwriting practice. Shaffer began writing a series of whispered folk songs from her bed, tracked vocals and guitar with Michael Macdonald (The Slaps, Tenci, Mia Joy, Tasha) at Bim Bom Studios in Chicago, and invited her collaborators to record on them. After arranging their contributions, Shaffer brought the music to La Frette Studios in France, the esteemed 100-year-old mansion-turned-recording studio, for mixing sessions with engineer Anthony Cazade (Fontaines D.C., BallakĂ© Sissoko) and Jordan Reyes (ONO, The Ark of Teeth).
Patience foregrounds Shafferâs acoustic guitar and voiceâtender, haunting, and controlledâusing her arrangements to conjure atmosphere. The opening track, a near-silent field recording taken from the windowsill of Shafferâs Brooklyn bedroom, fades into the first soft fingerpicked notes of her guitar on âForever,â bridging the gap between Shafferâs earlier work and the clarity of Patience. While Shaffer yearns for permanence in the first few lines of âForever,â as Liyouâs twinkling piano emerges, she changes her tune, instead finding comfort, even strength, in accepting change as it comes. âAll My Dreams Are Coming Trueâ unifies biting sarcasm (âIâve been pacing back and forth for so long I think itâs a sportâ) with an upbeat, folk rock beat, before transitioning with an interlude to âAnyoneâ: a waltz with a Galdes shuffle, light piano flourishes from Liyou and lyrics that are gentle yet defiant (âIâm in the spring of my life, Iâm in the zone againâ).
Patience oscillates between high and low, between certainty and uncertainty. The penultimate track, âI Guess Iâm Crawling,â acts as a thesis statement. Shafferâs guitar is right up front, her vocals gentle, like sheâs singing a lullaby. But she sings of inconveniences, mistakes, shortcomings, unfairnesses, doubts herself. âDo you believe in me, fifty paces up ahead?â she asks. âTrudging up a mountain, broken body, quicksand bed.â This is where patience comes in: as she sings, âitâs the only trick I know.â By the end of the track, a deal is made: âI guess I lay down by the pond. Joy in music, all night long. I guess Iâm crawling.â All of these supposed failures, Shaffer suggests, lead you to where youâre supposed to be. Though her newest songs navigate optimism and pessimism, hope and defeat, frustration and acceptance, on Patience, Shaffer has never sounded so sure.
âI keep thinking about this idea that once you think youâre on the path, youâve lost the path,â says New York musician Devin Shaffer, explaining the ethos behind Patience, her first studio album. âThere is no certainty, there is no knowing. Itâs all about surrender.â Written between 2021 and 2023 and Shafferâs move from Chicago to New York City, Patience mirrors lifeâs highs and lows on the search for spiritual meaning, purpose, and connection. For the first time, Shaffer leads a group of sensitive instrumentalistsâLucy Liyou on piano, Sarah Galdes (LâRain, Bartees Strange) on drums, Marilu Donovan (LEYA) on harp, and Mari Rubio (More Eaze) on pedal steelâthrough a stirring, hushed collection of folk songs. On Patience, Shaffer challenges both herself and the listener to find peace in the unknowing and comfort in the surrender.
Patience takes on the hushed intimacy of songwriters like Vashti Bunyan, Sibylle Baier, and Linda Perhacs and updates it for the twenty-first century. After releasing her debut LP, In My Dreams Iâm There in 2021, Shaffer found a discarded Martin acoustic guitar on the side of the road with a note that read, âThis is for you.â âIn the past, my songs were very much woven into this greater ambient soundscape,â explains Shaffer. âSongs would emerge from ambient drift and archival audio. When I had more traditional songs, I never really let them sit on their own.â But she took the guitar as an invitation to strip down her songwriting practice. Shaffer began writing a series of whispered folk songs from her bed, tracked vocals and guitar with Michael Macdonald (The Slaps, Tenci, Mia Joy, Tasha) at Bim Bom Studios in Chicago, and invited her collaborators to record on them. After arranging their contributions, Shaffer brought the music to La Frette Studios in France, the esteemed 100-year-old mansion-turned-recording studio, for mixing sessions with engineer Anthony Cazade (Fontaines D.C., BallakĂ© Sissoko) and Jordan Reyes (ONO, The Ark of Teeth).
Patience foregrounds Shafferâs acoustic guitar and voiceâtender, haunting, and controlledâusing her arrangements to conjure atmosphere. The opening track, a near-silent field recording taken from the windowsill of Shafferâs Brooklyn bedroom, fades into the first soft fingerpicked notes of her guitar on âForever,â bridging the gap between Shafferâs earlier work and the clarity of Patience. While Shaffer yearns for permanence in the first few lines of âForever,â as Liyouâs twinkling piano emerges, she changes her tune, instead finding comfort, even strength, in accepting change as it comes. âAll My Dreams Are Coming Trueâ unifies biting sarcasm (âIâve been pacing back and forth for so long I think itâs a sportâ) with an upbeat, folk rock beat, before transitioning with an interlude to âAnyoneâ: a waltz with a Galdes shuffle, light piano flourishes from Liyou and lyrics that are gentle yet defiant (âIâm in the spring of my life, Iâm in the zone againâ).
Patience oscillates between high and low, between certainty and uncertainty. The penultimate track, âI Guess Iâm Crawling,â acts as a thesis statement. Shafferâs guitar is right up front, her vocals gentle, like sheâs singing a lullaby. But she sings of inconveniences, mistakes, shortcomings, unfairnesses, doubts herself. âDo you believe in me, fifty paces up ahead?â she asks. âTrudging up a mountain, broken body, quicksand bed.â This is where patience comes in: as she sings, âitâs the only trick I know.â By the end of the track, a deal is made: âI guess I lay down by the pond. Joy in music, all night long. I guess Iâm crawling.â All of these supposed failures, Shaffer suggests, lead you to where youâre supposed to be. Though her newest songs navigate optimism and pessimism, hope and defeat, frustration and acceptance, on Patience, Shaffer has never sounded so sure.
Patience takes on the hushed intimacy of songwriters like Vashti Bunyan, Sibylle Baier, and Linda Perhacs and updates it for the twenty-first century. After releasing her debut LP, In My Dreams Iâm There in 2021, Shaffer found a discarded Martin acoustic guitar on the side of the road with a note that read, âThis is for you.â âIn the past, my songs were very much woven into this greater ambient soundscape,â explains Shaffer. âSongs would emerge from ambient drift and archival audio. When I had more traditional songs, I never really let them sit on their own.â But she took the guitar as an invitation to strip down her songwriting practice. Shaffer began writing a series of whispered folk songs from her bed, tracked vocals and guitar with Michael Macdonald (The Slaps, Tenci, Mia Joy, Tasha) at Bim Bom Studios in Chicago, and invited her collaborators to record on them. After arranging their contributions, Shaffer brought the music to La Frette Studios in France, the esteemed 100-year-old mansion-turned-recording studio, for mixing sessions with engineer Anthony Cazade (Fontaines D.C., BallakĂ© Sissoko) and Jordan Reyes (ONO, The Ark of Teeth).
Patience foregrounds Shafferâs acoustic guitar and voiceâtender, haunting, and controlledâusing her arrangements to conjure atmosphere. The opening track, a near-silent field recording taken from the windowsill of Shafferâs Brooklyn bedroom, fades into the first soft fingerpicked notes of her guitar on âForever,â bridging the gap between Shafferâs earlier work and the clarity of Patience. While Shaffer yearns for permanence in the first few lines of âForever,â as Liyouâs twinkling piano emerges, she changes her tune, instead finding comfort, even strength, in accepting change as it comes. âAll My Dreams Are Coming Trueâ unifies biting sarcasm (âIâve been pacing back and forth for so long I think itâs a sportâ) with an upbeat, folk rock beat, before transitioning with an interlude to âAnyoneâ: a waltz with a Galdes shuffle, light piano flourishes from Liyou and lyrics that are gentle yet defiant (âIâm in the spring of my life, Iâm in the zone againâ).
Patience oscillates between high and low, between certainty and uncertainty. The penultimate track, âI Guess Iâm Crawling,â acts as a thesis statement. Shafferâs guitar is right up front, her vocals gentle, like sheâs singing a lullaby. But she sings of inconveniences, mistakes, shortcomings, unfairnesses, doubts herself. âDo you believe in me, fifty paces up ahead?â she asks. âTrudging up a mountain, broken body, quicksand bed.â This is where patience comes in: as she sings, âitâs the only trick I know.â By the end of the track, a deal is made: âI guess I lay down by the pond. Joy in music, all night long. I guess Iâm crawling.â All of these supposed failures, Shaffer suggests, lead you to where youâre supposed to be. Though her newest songs navigate optimism and pessimism, hope and defeat, frustration and acceptance, on Patience, Shaffer has never sounded so sure.
$9.72
Original: $32.41
-70%DEVIN SHAFFER - Patience LPâ
$32.41
$9.72Description
âI keep thinking about this idea that once you think youâre on the path, youâve lost the path,â says New York musician Devin Shaffer, explaining the ethos behind Patience, her first studio album. âThere is no certainty, there is no knowing. Itâs all about surrender.â Written between 2021 and 2023 and Shafferâs move from Chicago to New York City, Patience mirrors lifeâs highs and lows on the search for spiritual meaning, purpose, and connection. For the first time, Shaffer leads a group of sensitive instrumentalistsâLucy Liyou on piano, Sarah Galdes (LâRain, Bartees Strange) on drums, Marilu Donovan (LEYA) on harp, and Mari Rubio (More Eaze) on pedal steelâthrough a stirring, hushed collection of folk songs. On Patience, Shaffer challenges both herself and the listener to find peace in the unknowing and comfort in the surrender.
Patience takes on the hushed intimacy of songwriters like Vashti Bunyan, Sibylle Baier, and Linda Perhacs and updates it for the twenty-first century. After releasing her debut LP, In My Dreams Iâm There in 2021, Shaffer found a discarded Martin acoustic guitar on the side of the road with a note that read, âThis is for you.â âIn the past, my songs were very much woven into this greater ambient soundscape,â explains Shaffer. âSongs would emerge from ambient drift and archival audio. When I had more traditional songs, I never really let them sit on their own.â But she took the guitar as an invitation to strip down her songwriting practice. Shaffer began writing a series of whispered folk songs from her bed, tracked vocals and guitar with Michael Macdonald (The Slaps, Tenci, Mia Joy, Tasha) at Bim Bom Studios in Chicago, and invited her collaborators to record on them. After arranging their contributions, Shaffer brought the music to La Frette Studios in France, the esteemed 100-year-old mansion-turned-recording studio, for mixing sessions with engineer Anthony Cazade (Fontaines D.C., BallakĂ© Sissoko) and Jordan Reyes (ONO, The Ark of Teeth).
Patience foregrounds Shafferâs acoustic guitar and voiceâtender, haunting, and controlledâusing her arrangements to conjure atmosphere. The opening track, a near-silent field recording taken from the windowsill of Shafferâs Brooklyn bedroom, fades into the first soft fingerpicked notes of her guitar on âForever,â bridging the gap between Shafferâs earlier work and the clarity of Patience. While Shaffer yearns for permanence in the first few lines of âForever,â as Liyouâs twinkling piano emerges, she changes her tune, instead finding comfort, even strength, in accepting change as it comes. âAll My Dreams Are Coming Trueâ unifies biting sarcasm (âIâve been pacing back and forth for so long I think itâs a sportâ) with an upbeat, folk rock beat, before transitioning with an interlude to âAnyoneâ: a waltz with a Galdes shuffle, light piano flourishes from Liyou and lyrics that are gentle yet defiant (âIâm in the spring of my life, Iâm in the zone againâ).
Patience oscillates between high and low, between certainty and uncertainty. The penultimate track, âI Guess Iâm Crawling,â acts as a thesis statement. Shafferâs guitar is right up front, her vocals gentle, like sheâs singing a lullaby. But she sings of inconveniences, mistakes, shortcomings, unfairnesses, doubts herself. âDo you believe in me, fifty paces up ahead?â she asks. âTrudging up a mountain, broken body, quicksand bed.â This is where patience comes in: as she sings, âitâs the only trick I know.â By the end of the track, a deal is made: âI guess I lay down by the pond. Joy in music, all night long. I guess Iâm crawling.â All of these supposed failures, Shaffer suggests, lead you to where youâre supposed to be. Though her newest songs navigate optimism and pessimism, hope and defeat, frustration and acceptance, on Patience, Shaffer has never sounded so sure.
Patience takes on the hushed intimacy of songwriters like Vashti Bunyan, Sibylle Baier, and Linda Perhacs and updates it for the twenty-first century. After releasing her debut LP, In My Dreams Iâm There in 2021, Shaffer found a discarded Martin acoustic guitar on the side of the road with a note that read, âThis is for you.â âIn the past, my songs were very much woven into this greater ambient soundscape,â explains Shaffer. âSongs would emerge from ambient drift and archival audio. When I had more traditional songs, I never really let them sit on their own.â But she took the guitar as an invitation to strip down her songwriting practice. Shaffer began writing a series of whispered folk songs from her bed, tracked vocals and guitar with Michael Macdonald (The Slaps, Tenci, Mia Joy, Tasha) at Bim Bom Studios in Chicago, and invited her collaborators to record on them. After arranging their contributions, Shaffer brought the music to La Frette Studios in France, the esteemed 100-year-old mansion-turned-recording studio, for mixing sessions with engineer Anthony Cazade (Fontaines D.C., BallakĂ© Sissoko) and Jordan Reyes (ONO, The Ark of Teeth).
Patience foregrounds Shafferâs acoustic guitar and voiceâtender, haunting, and controlledâusing her arrangements to conjure atmosphere. The opening track, a near-silent field recording taken from the windowsill of Shafferâs Brooklyn bedroom, fades into the first soft fingerpicked notes of her guitar on âForever,â bridging the gap between Shafferâs earlier work and the clarity of Patience. While Shaffer yearns for permanence in the first few lines of âForever,â as Liyouâs twinkling piano emerges, she changes her tune, instead finding comfort, even strength, in accepting change as it comes. âAll My Dreams Are Coming Trueâ unifies biting sarcasm (âIâve been pacing back and forth for so long I think itâs a sportâ) with an upbeat, folk rock beat, before transitioning with an interlude to âAnyoneâ: a waltz with a Galdes shuffle, light piano flourishes from Liyou and lyrics that are gentle yet defiant (âIâm in the spring of my life, Iâm in the zone againâ).
Patience oscillates between high and low, between certainty and uncertainty. The penultimate track, âI Guess Iâm Crawling,â acts as a thesis statement. Shafferâs guitar is right up front, her vocals gentle, like sheâs singing a lullaby. But she sings of inconveniences, mistakes, shortcomings, unfairnesses, doubts herself. âDo you believe in me, fifty paces up ahead?â she asks. âTrudging up a mountain, broken body, quicksand bed.â This is where patience comes in: as she sings, âitâs the only trick I know.â By the end of the track, a deal is made: âI guess I lay down by the pond. Joy in music, all night long. I guess Iâm crawling.â All of these supposed failures, Shaffer suggests, lead you to where youâre supposed to be. Though her newest songs navigate optimism and pessimism, hope and defeat, frustration and acceptance, on Patience, Shaffer has never sounded so sure.











