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Future Islands' trademark sound is sleek, guitar-less synth pop balanced with the howls, yelps, and croons of dynamic vocalist
Samuel T. Herring. The Baltimore-based group honed their sound on a series of promising albums before their near-perfect 2014 LP
Singles and a stunning appearance on Late Night with David Letterman vaulted them to prominence.
Herring's daring as a vocalist and the band's sweeping melodies were further honed to a point on the slick 2017 album
The Far Field and 2020's melancholy
As Long as You Are.
The band started out making electro-pop music together in 2003 while attending East Carolina University's art program. Along with
Herring, the initial members of the group were keyboardist Adam Beeby, bassist
William Cashion, keyboardist
Gerrit Welmers, and percussionist Kymia Nawabi, and they played shows around campus as Art Lord & the Self-Portraits. In 2006, after the band split,
Herring,
Cashion, and
Welmers continued under the name
Future Islands and picked up
the Kickass bassist Erick Murillo to fill out their sound on an electronic drum kit. The band released a few CD-Rs, splits, and cassettes, then began work on their debut album with producer
Chester Endersby Gwazda. After the album was recorded, but before it was released, the band, minus Murillo, relocated to Baltimore.
Wave Like Home was released in 2008 for the
Upset the Rhythm label.
Future Islands toured steadily, built up a fan base, and continued refining their sound. They signed to Thrill Jockey and released two records in 2010, the
In the Fall EP and the In Evening Air album. After some conflict over their next album, 2011's On the Water, the group left Thrill Jockey and went underground.
Herring worked on his hip-hop side project, Hemlock Ernst, and the band quietly began work on another album. They released a single for old friends
Upset the Rhythm in 2012, then in 2013 signed with 4AD. Their first album for the label, 2014's
Singles, was a streamlined, very accessible synth pop album produced by
Chris Coady. They caused a splash in the indie rock community when their performance of one of the album's highlights, "Seasons (Waiting on You)," on Late Night with David Letterman left the host dazzled and nearly speechless. The band toured extensively, appeared at Glastonbury in 2015, and that same year released a single, "The Chase"/"Haunted by You."
In the interim between albums,
Herring kept very busy. He popped up as a guest vocalist on tracks by
Clams Casino,
Du Blonde, and
BadBadNotGood, formed a hip-hop duo called Trouble Knows Me with producer
Madlib, and appeared on numerous tracks using his Hemlock Ernst hip-hop alter ego. Amidst this flurry of activity,
Herring and the rest of
Future Islands found time to make their sixth album. Working with producer
John Congleton, they added a layer of studio sheen to their trademark sound, while calling in
Blondie's
Debbie Harry to guest on a track. The resulting record,
The Far Field, was issued by 4AD in early 2017.
Touring drummer
Mike Lowry officially joined the band before sessions for their next album commenced. For the first time, the group co-produced, working with engineer
Steve Wright at his Wrightway Studios in Baltimore to craft a moodier, more restrained record that leaned on epic synth ballads.
As Long as You Are was released in October 2020; on the same day
Future Islands played their 1,235th show, a livestream that would be their only concert of 2020. In 2021, the group issued the uplifting standalone single "Peach." ~ Jason Lymangrover