This is Lorelei
Brudenell Social Club, 33 Queens Road, LS6 1NY Leeds Kort
mið. 18.11.2026 19:30
Brudenell Presents...
The last few years have been transformative for Nate Amos. Between delivering breakout records both as a solo artist — under his This Is Lorelei moniker — and with his band Water From Your Eyes, sold out shows across multiple continents, to seeing some of today’s most influential artists cover his songs, the ascending songwriter has found his stride.
2024’s Box for Buddy, Box for Star was Amos’ first attempt at an intentionally written full-length solo album, tackling newfound sobriety through a roving tongue-in-cheek take on musical personas, all strained through Amos’ genre-agnostic lens. It was a critical and word-of-mouth success, spawning a deluxe version with covers and collaborations including MJ Lenderman, Hayley Williams, Jeff Tweedy, Cameron Winter and many more.
For many years, Amos’ This Is Lorelei project was known only to a close knit group of creatives in Chicago, where he relocated in his early 20s and produced hundreds of albums and EP’s, tracing the outlines for both of his prolific projects before relocating to New York. In the time since, he’s flourished as a wildly creative polymath who is equally adept at slinging heart worn hooks and eyeball-exploding art-pop.
Flytjendur
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This Is LoreleiA long running songwriting outlet for New York-based Nate Amos, known for his work as one half of the critically acclaimed duo Water From Your Eyes and the duo My Idea, which he leads with Lily Konigsberg, This Is Lorelei began in 2015 while Amos lived in Chicago. He cut his teeth producing hundreds of records for collaborators in the DIY scene there, steadily amassing a vast catalog of Lorelei EP’s and albums along the way, all produced, performed, and engineered by Amos. While originally a home for Amos’ most experimental compositions, the project has evolved to seamlessly thread a needle through indie, electronica, country, and more, operating in an almost diaristic manner. Amos grew up singing harmony and performing in his father Bob Amos’ bluegrass band, developing sensibilities that come to the foreground in his work under the Lorelei moniker. Some of his earliest memories are of songwriting, picking up a guitar in the 5th grade, and as he remembers “I was always trying to start a band but wasn’t around anyone who was interested in doing more than coming up with a name and making an album cover until high school.”