American singer, songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, and producer, Eartheater (the alias of Alexandra Drewchin) has released her seventh album Heavenly Body: If I'm The Bottle You're The Message on July 14th via Chemical X, under exclusive license to Mad Decent.
Fully produced by Eartheater and David Sitek, the 11-track album is entirely born from the experience of becoming a mother, a journey she began documenting just three months after her daughter Nova was born.
"This album is for my baby and becoming a mother," Eartheater shares. "Even if you don't have children or never plan on doing so, we all have a mother. We all came through the portal." That universality is the album's quiet secret: deeply personal yet emotionally accessible to anyone who has ever been held, lost, or found.
The opening "Malka Moma" is bold and unexpected: a rendition of the Bulgarian folk song "Малка мома," about a young maiden praying for dove's eyes and falcon's wings. Ethereal vocals blend with ambient production that honors the traditional while pulling it somewhere entirely new. It's a declaration of intent: this album will travel.
"Paradise Rains" follows with folk-driven melodies and otherworldly vocals. Eartheater revealed via social media that the song documents buying back her childhood farm with her husband and conceiving their baby the day they first returned to the property, a story of memory, dissolution, and deep love colliding simultaneously. The chorus addresses her baby directly: "Baby, I'm home, my ghost to its shell."
"Practical Amnesia" confronts the fears that come with new motherhood, the worries about the world, about inherited traumas, while singing about evolution's merciful ability to make us forget certain pain: "I've forgotten the pain / It's a funny thing / Evolution's practical amnesia."
"Crown Jewel," one of her own favorite songs she's ever written, was released as a single in June alongside its accompanying music video, and stands as one of the album's most emotionally direct moments.
"Wasp in the Fig" is another album highlight and delivers eerie melodies with natural sounds and high-pitched vocals, creating a mystagogic experience as Eartheater reflects on who she was before. "Glowing Guts" follows with a hypnotic, repetitive refrain that captures the bodily strangeness and wonder of pregnancy in just two minutes of loop-like intensity.
"Don't Look Back" and "Favorite" show her moving into slightly more accessible territory, still unmistakably her own, still carrying the existential weight that defines the album, but with production that reaches toward something almost pop-adjacent. "We are the future, it's already happened," she sings, confronting both motherhood and eternity in the same breath.
"Fast Asleep," the duet with French electronic artist oklou, carries a connection that goes beyond musical affinity.
Both artists became mothers around the same period, making their collaboration here something rarer than a feature, it's a genuine shared frequency. Two new mothers meeting in sound, navigating the same tender, terrifying, and transformative experience from different sides of the world. Their voices together create something that feels like a lullaby written in a language that doesn't yet have a name.
The album closes with "Nova" (named after Eartheater's daughter) an ambient, downtempo piece co-produced alongside Nosaj Thing and Michael Andrews. She describes pregnancy in planetary terms: her daughter makes her a nebula, a vast collection of gas and dust where stars begin to form. It's a breathtaking metaphor that transforms the deeply biological into something cosmic and infinite.
Heavenly Body: If I'm The Bottle You're The Message surveys the pregnant body as a vessel for something greater than itself and Eartheater delivers on that premise completely.
While the album channels the spirit of experimental pioneers like Björk, it never copies them, carving out its own sacred space where folk tradition, ambient electronics, and raw maternal experience coexist. A genuinely moving and artistically fearless record, one of 2026's most essential listens!
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