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$10.14The Story
**This record is up for pre-order with a release date of 7/31/26. Orders containing pre-order items will be held until all items are in stock.
In the past quarter-century, those in the know have watched Shearwater slyly become one of the most distinctive and adventurous American bands. Led (as always) by songwriter and natural historian Jonathan Meiburg, The New Worldās nine immersive songs find the group farther afield than ever, and in rare company: along with Meiburgās fellow Shearwaters Emily Lee and Dan Duszynski, the albumās supporting cast includes instrumental wizard Shahzad Ismaily, saxophonist and clarinetist Doug Wieselman, qanunist Farouz Zriek, guitarist Leo Abrahams, ngonist Mamadou Kouyate, percussionists Mahamadou Tounkara and Moctar Kouyate (of Ngoni Ba), and unclassifiable drummer Thor Harris. (Thereās even a surprise visit from a certain L. Anderson.) That might sound like a lot of passengers, but theyāre all ideal company for a headlong journey through joy, confusion, reverence and defiance, with Meiburgās voice as a graceful yet elusive guide. Both spare and ornate, The New World is absorbing in a way few albums are; itās hard not to listen to the end once you drop in.
Description
**This record is up for pre-order with a release date of 7/31/26. Orders containing pre-order items will be held until all items are in stock.
In the past quarter-century, those in the know have watched Shearwater slyly become one of the most distinctive and adventurous American bands. Led (as always) by songwriter and natural historian Jonathan Meiburg, The New Worldās nine immersive songs find the group farther afield than ever, and in rare company: along with Meiburgās fellow Shearwaters Emily Lee and Dan Duszynski, the albumās supporting cast includes instrumental wizard Shahzad Ismaily, saxophonist and clarinetist Doug Wieselman, qanunist Farouz Zriek, guitarist Leo Abrahams, ngonist Mamadou Kouyate, percussionists Mahamadou Tounkara and Moctar Kouyate (of Ngoni Ba), and unclassifiable drummer Thor Harris. (Thereās even a surprise visit from a certain L. Anderson.) That might sound like a lot of passengers, but theyāre all ideal company for a headlong journey through joy, confusion, reverence and defiance, with Meiburgās voice as a graceful yet elusive guide. Both spare and ornate, The New World is absorbing in a way few albums are; itās hard not to listen to the end once you drop in.













