Flypaper announces debut album on PNKSLM, shares new single "Oh Well"

Debut album from London's Rory Sear, FFO Elliott Smith, Hovvdy, Greg Mendez, Sun June


Flypaper

Announces debut album, Forget The Rush
Due 7th November via PNKSLM


Listen to new single, "Oh Well"


London & Brighton live dates this month

Forget sweeping narratives, elaborate concepts or grand gestures: with his spellbinding debut as Flypaper, Rory Sear simply shares a snapshot of a year. Meditating on the precariousness of life in ones late-20s, and transforming the quiet mundanity of the everyday into something profound, his debut album Forget The Rush is a timely reminder to stop and take a breath, expressed in the bittersweet, sun-dappled vernacular of the singer-songwriter tradition.

Forget The Rush will be released on 7th November via PNKSLM, and today Sear also shares lead single "Oh Well". A theme of feeling rudderless runs throughout the record, and, "Oh Well" sees Sear resolve, “I swear I'm gonna make a change this year,” over one of the album’s most undeniable melodies, hewn from ambling acoustic guitar and sparse piano, and climaxing in a sonorous electric guitar solo.

Rory Sear says of the single: "'Oh Well' is a reflective song – inward looking, looking at yourself or situations and maybe laughing at how tragic they can be or just coming to terms with that. ‘Oh well I guess that's life’ is quite a simple sentiment maybe said with a bit of irony, but still somewhat optimistic, maybe a little more optimistic than other songs on the record."

Flypaper - "Oh Well"
Streaming Services: https://PNKSLM.lnk.to/flypaper-oh-well
Video: https://youtu.be/AKpqZRFWEto


Album Preorder:
https://PNKSLM.lnk.to/forget-the-rush

Live Dates

23rd August - London, UK - The Ivy House
28th August - Brighton, UK - Green Door Store

10th September - London, UK - Avalon Cafe
17th September - Bedford, UK - Equires

20th November - Oxford, UK - The Library

25th November - Brighton, UK - Prince Albert 
26th November - London, UK - Sebright Arms

More about Forget The Rush...

If Rory Sear’s creative vision seems out of step with a world moving at a million miles an hour, you can understand his motivation. Thanks to his father’s work, Sear’s was a particularly peripatetic childhood, divided between Scotland, North Carolina, Portsmouth and Somerset. One of his key emotional anchors during that period was guitar, which he first picked up aged seven and largely taught himself, bar a handful of classical lessons. The brash immediacy of pop-punk proved his earliest love, before he fell for the more sophisticated, narrative-driven songwriting of Brian Wilson, Harry Nilsson and Randy Newman in his teens. 

You could say he drew on both schools of songwriting in Beachtape, the Brighton-based DIY four-piece he fronted while studying. Bringing a brilliantly breezy sensibility to melodic indie-rock, the quartet quietly fizzled out during the pandemic, following two EPs and a fistful of singles. Subsequently, Sear set about developing solo material as Flypaper, stealing his pseudonym from a song by influential 90s noise-rockers Brainiac.

As Sear explains, Flypaper actually began life as a piano project. “I was obsessed with Randy Newman so I bought a keyboard and had some friends help me record songs with a saxophone session guy.” He shudders, “It’s probably the worst idea I ever had.” Confronted by material he couldn’t stand behind, Sear scrapped the entire EP and started afresh, sans-piano. In his haste to make up for lost time, he stopped second-guessing his songwriting and stumbled upon Flypaper’s sleepy, acoustic guitar-led aesthetic.

Sear shared debut EP Big Nada in August 2023, which was re-released in 2024 via influential, Stockholm-based indie PNKSLM (ShitKid, Chemtrails, Sudakistan), as a companion piece to his second EP, Another Orbit. Together, the 12 tracks chronicled the first year of the project, with winningly lo-fi indie-rock redolent of Elliott Smith. If Big Nada/Another Orbit is evocative of Either/Or-era Smith, Forget The Rush feels more spiritually akin to XO, offering meatier arrangements, albeit with far fewer personnel. 

Remaining faithful to his DIY roots, Sear wrote, recorded and self-produced the album in his bedroom across the space of six months, playing every instrument except for drums. Listen carefully and you may well hear muffled voices or the distant slam of doors in his London house-share, both of which only enhance the sense of intimacy communicated in Sear’s diaristic lyrics and world-weary semi-whisper. 

Throughout, there’s a sense of a neat resolution being just out of reach, but it’s perhaps never as clearly communicated as it is on ‘Come Down’. Featuring backing vocals from Swedish outfit 7ebra, its appeal to “forget the rush” is echoed in its languorous arrangement, pairing strummed chords with chiming top notes. 

Equal parts tender and truthful, Forget The Rush is as much a soundtrack to escape to, as it is an exploration of feeling unmoored. Take a step back from your reality and listen.

Tracklisting

1. Fold
2. Oh Well
3. Come Down
4. Death Of Me
5. On Your Mind
6. Life Is Strange
7. Slow Down
8. Quite Right
9. Circus



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