Helena Deland's "Spring Bug" Is a Warm Meditation on Coping With Our Past Lives
Helena Deland, an artful character in indie-folk, has re-emerged as a solo artist with a ruminating reflection on self-growth. âSpring Bugâ is a lush landscape of oil-painted acoustic pondering, traipsing lightly through meaningful lyrics.
Deland opens the track with cyclical acoustic guitar fingerpicking, warm in tone and pensive in sound. The easy current of the guitar almost gives off the feeling of meditation, coursing through dissonant progressions. A quirky acoustic bass line joins in the second verse, nodding to the eccentric twinge in Delandâs sound.
The eloquent artist muses on serene melodies, existing somewhere between wistfulness and ease. âSpring Bugâ explores the way we grow into and out of ourselves each year, and how to cope with the company of our inner ancestry. She sings, âPast lives walk by and I blush / I try leaving fast enough to outrun them.â
The accompanying music video captures Delandâs nostalgic musings perfectly, flipping through washy film grain photos for a stop-motion effect. With a slight blur in the visuals, viewers experience âSpring Bugâ like the way the world looks when youâre rolling down a hillâa dreamy, euphoric experience, akin to a half-formed memory in the making.
âSpring Bugâ also bears the news of a North American tour, which will be Delandâs first headline run. Along with last yearâs track, âSwimmer,â this new single is Delandâs debut since her 2020 full-length album Someone New. Itâs an introspective re-introduction to the artistâs delicate and wise songwriting perspective and an alluring glimpse of whatâs to come for and from the artist.
Watch the "Spring Bug" video below: