Basia Bulat

Basia's Palace

Vinyl

Regular price $29.99 CAD

Throughout her new album, Basia Bulat pays tribute to the magic of creation and the spellwork of performance. Basia’s Palace is co-produced by frequent collaborator Mark Lawson and mixed by legendary engineer Tucker Martine (Beth Orton, Neko Case, The National). Listen to the glistening lead single, “Baby,” an elegant dance-inflected track augmented by strings courtesy of GRAMMY-nominated arranger Drew Jurecka (Dua Lipa, Alvvays, Metric).

THIS PRODUCT WILL BECOME AVAILABLE AND WILL BE SHIPPED ON FEBRUARY 21, 2025. PLEASE NOTE THAT YOUR CREDIT CARD WILL BE CHARGED UPON PURCHASE.

NOTE THAT THIS ALBUM WILL ALSO BE AVAILABLE BY DOWNLOAD STARTING ON FEBRUARY 21, 2025.

Please note that this is a pre-order. The album will be available on February 21, 2025.  Let’s get one thing out of the way: Basia Bulat...

Please note that this is a pre-order. The album will be available on February 21, 2025. 

 

Let’s get one thing out of the way: Basia Bulat doesn’t live in a château. The property at the heart of the songwriter’s new studio album is at once her apartment, her jam-space, and the inside of her head. Basia’s Palace is a place festooned with love and memory, and bad wiring; it’s a paradise that comes alive in the wee hours of the night–a time that’s suited to video games and Leonard Cohen records, when you sit in all that richness and take in all the mess we inherit. 

Basia’s Palace got its start in 2022. A new home, a new family, a pause: the singer was finally finding time to hear her own thoughts, to think about old stories, to boot up her Nintendo to play Dragon Warrior 4. It brought to mind anecdotes Bulat had heard about Cohen—how he used to do his best writing at three or four a.m., before his kids woke up, when he’d sit and toy with his Casio’s presets. Now it was Bulat sneaking down to play RPGs or to make music on her MacBook, listening for the spirit-world at a time when the veil felt thinnest. The songs she was creating didn’t feel like anything she had recorded before—MIDI soundscapes that floated and gleamed, like hidden levels above (or below) the action. 

The album that emerged from all this—that started in dawn-kissed synth instrumentals, lyrics scribbled down in a Hayao Miyazaki notebook—is the softest and most searching of her career. Co-produced by frequent collaborator Mark Lawson (who worked with her on Tall Tall Shadow and The Garden), and mixed by legendary engineer Tucker Martine (Beth Orton, Neko Case, The National), Basia’s Palace is like a time-travel score, with Bulat akin to Chrono Trigger’s intrepid adventurer, going back into the past to shape the events of the future. After years of releasing records where live performance came first—culminating in 2022’s The Garden, which reimagined some of her best-loved songs with help from a string quartet—the singer-songwriter wanted to express herself in a completely different way, composing with MIDI instead of piano or guitar. She found herself moving through a dreamworld of whispers, synths, and early Eurovision tunes–and Cohen’s I’m Your Man and her great uncle’s gauzy Maryla Rodowicz LPs.  

  

The result feels like an album that was concealed behind the backings of Bulat’s childhood photos—tracks like “My Angel,” where mystery and romance mingle over squelchy synths, drum machine, and a soaring string arrangement by Drew Jurecka (Dua Lipa, Alvvays), or “Laughter,” which takes a quiet garden scene and sees it build to a deafening sublime. “Disco Polo” is a track Bulat’s been threatening to make for years: a folk-song named for a genre of Polish dance music that was beloved by her late father. Meanwhile “Baby,” which took years to finish, makes an elegant dance number out of an all-too-familiar predicament: “Baby, baby, baby,” Basia sings, “I don’t learn!” At some moments there are shades of Serge Gainsbourg and Brigitte Bardot’s “Bonnie and Clyde” or Charles Aznavour’s “Emmenez-Moi,” and at others it’s the silicon-shiny sweetness of The Cardigans’ “Lovefool” or Air’s Moon Safari 

Throughout, Bulat pays tribute to the magic of creation and the spellwork of performance. This is the truest location of Basia’s Palace: not just the Mile End jam-space where she recorded much of this LP; not just her home, her family, or her searching spirit. But the moment itself—the one that happens on-stage, or in the instant of creation—when a song leaves Basia’s heart and leaps onto her lips.  

Product Details

Vinyl
12” Coke Bottle Green Coloured Vinyl 140g
Sleeve
Simple
Label
Secret City Records

Production Credits

Producers
Basia Bulat / Mark Lawson
Recording Engineers
Mark Lawson / Andrew Woods
Mixing
Tucker Martine
Mastering
Harris Newman

Musicians

Basia Bulat
Vocals / Acoustic Guitar / Electric Guitar / Synthesizer / Drum Programming / Autoharp / Upright Bass / Piano / Wurlitzer Electric Piano / Organ
Drew Jurecka
Strings
Joshua Toal
Bass Guitar / Acoustic Guitar / Backing Vocals / Electric Guitar
Ben Whiteley
Upright Bass / Bass Guitar / Bass Synthesizer
Matthew Woodley
Drums / Percussion
Andrew Woods
Acoustic Guitar / Electric Guitar / Synthesizer / Drum Programming / Midi Programming

Composition Credits

All songs were written and composed by
Basia Bulat