Oh Land's newest album, Family Tree, produced by Thomas Bartlett and slated for a May 2019 release, is her first studio album in 5 years, and is a much more intimate album than anything she's done before.
"Since the release of my latest album, I've experienced the biggest ups and downs of my private life," notes Nanna, who had a baby, moved back to Denmark after living in NYC for ten years, and got a divorce all in the span of 18 months. "Music has, for me, always been the friend who listens and never judges. And music listens best when you pour your heart out."
Oh Land also composes music for film, theater and the classical music world. She has performed with Lang Lang and Joshua Bell at Carnegie Hall in New York City, and orchestrated concerts for the Danish Symphony orchestra in her native country of Denmark. She collaborated with the Queen of Denmark to create a ballet for the Danish Theatre (2016); created the music for Watermusic, a multimedia performance for over 15,000 people at Randers Harbor combining architecture, dance and music (2017), as well as creating the musical score for the exhibition "The Ship" at Nikolaj Kunsthal in collaboration with Eske Kath. Most recently she reimagined the Danish National Anthem as a dark, dystopian theme song for the new Netflix sci-fi hit "The Rain".
Arthur Moon is the moniker of Lora-Faye Åshuvud, who WNYC calls "an artist bent on upending your expectations of what a pop song should sound like." The Arthur Moon band also includes Martin D Fowler (composer for This American Life and The Wilderness), Cale Hawkins (Quincy Jones, Wyclef Jean, Nikki Yanofsky), Aviva Jaye, and Dave Palazola.
"Arthur Moon is queering pop." - Paper Magazine