Soundtrack to the Life We Leave Behind

Campbell rises above all other references and stakes his claim to being one of
the countryā€™s truly great pop songwriters

The Herald

Hard To Regret is the second single from Willie Campbellā€™s forthcoming album: Soundtrack To The Life
We Leave Behind
which will be released this summer and just in time for all the festivals still not happening
this year.

More a melancholic closing time reflection than the hedonistic hands up hoedown of its predecessor, Hard
To Regret
explores our previous lives and how we think of and about them. After a year of distances it is a
charming 4 minute friendship full of reflection and hope.

Listen now

Biog

Willie Campbell is a Scottish singer songwriter based on the Isle of Lewis who first came to widespread
attention in the late 1990s when co-fronting Astrid (www.astridmusic.net) who by the time they had
disbanded had racked up everything from soundtracking Jamie Oliver cookery programmes to a Simon Mayo
single of the week on Radio 1.

Along with Snow Patrolā€™s Gary Lightbody, Willie was then a founding member of turn of the century indie
collective The Reindeer Section which also included various members of Teenage Fanclub, Arab Strap,
Mogwai, Belle & Sebastian and many others.

More recently Willie has been releasing records as The Open Day Rotation and has 3 critically acclaimed
albums: 2008 debut Down by the Head followed by Toxic Good Toxic Bad and in 2018 New Clouds in
Motion
, the latter produced by Tony Doogan (Mogwai, Belle & Sebastian).

Released on Friday 26th March is the title single from Willieā€™s forthcoming new album Soundtrack To The
Life We Leave Behind
. It is 4 minutes of old school indie guitars and sing along choruses. Fittingly for our
lockdown lives itā€™s a paean of summer festival optimism and handclaps to be cheered with beer held high in
the fields weā€™ve yet to return to.

Campbell and MacNeilā€™s first single is
built around the formerā€™s chiming music
box-cadence, absolutely beautifulā€™.

The Guardian

There must be something in the
Scottish air that inspires this sort of
thing. Regardless, itā€™s a gorgeous,
compelling listen

Drowned in Sound

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