EAT YOUR OWN EARS EYOE   

Summer Camp

ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVXYZ ()
FRYARS
Heaven
Wednesday 27 November 2013

£9.50 ADVANCE

We’re delighted to announce that Summer Camp will play a show at London’s Heaven

Summer Camp are Jeremy Warmsley and Elizabeth Sankey – the “head and heart” of the band respectively, as they describe
themselves – and ‘Summer Camp’ is the follow up to their debut ‘Welcome To Condale’, whose twelve tracks gave autumn 2011 a
welcome shot of sunshine with its gorgeous collection of lushly melodic pop songs woven around a central narrative of an imaginary
suburb deep in the heart of America, a cinematic microverse of teenage lovers and loners, high school freaks and geeks.
Never ones to rest on their laurels, Elizabeth and Jeremy followed their debut with the ‘Always’ EP in July 2012, five new songs that
saw the duo equally adept at melodious dancefloor fillers as guitar pop. Written on piano, the tracks, including singles ‘Life’ and
‘Always’, took on a life of their own in the studio, resulting in a set described as “LCD Soundsystem versus Donna Summer” by NME,
and “delirious disco-informed synthpop,” by Stereogum, who proclaimed it “the best thing they’ve ever done”.
Bar a run of festival shows, the rest of 2012 was spent writing the bulk of the songs that would become ‘Summer Camp’. In contrast
to the conceptual lyrics of their debut, this time around the pair began writing from a more personal place: “With this album, we
pushed ourselves to be more open, to portray our own emotions honestly rather than using fictional characters. The process was
difficult, tantrums were had, but ultimately we’re glad to have songs that more closely represent us, our friends, and being alive in
this decade.”
With their finest set of songs yet in the bag, they headed into the studio with legendary producer Stephen Street (The Smiths, Blur).
The result is an eleven-track marvel, cherry-picking the best bits of ‘Welcome To Condale’ and ‘Always’ , and weaving them into a
cohesive whole that is very much the sound of Summer Camp in 2013, a confident, fully-realised body of work that befits the cliche
‘all killer, no filler’. “This album is a statement of intent: this is us, take it or leave it…” says Jeremy. “… Please take it,” Elizabeth
adds.



Summer Camp

Summer Camp

FRYARS
Heaven
Wednesday 27 November 2013

£9.50 ADVANCE

We’re delighted to announce that Summer Camp will play a show at London’s Heaven

Summer Camp are Jeremy Warmsley and Elizabeth Sankey – the “head and heart” of the band respectively, as they describe
themselves – and ‘Summer Camp’ is the follow up to their debut ‘Welcome To Condale’, whose twelve tracks gave autumn 2011 a
welcome shot of sunshine with its gorgeous collection of lushly melodic pop songs woven around a central narrative of an imaginary
suburb deep in the heart of America, a cinematic microverse of teenage lovers and loners, high school freaks and geeks.
Never ones to rest on their laurels, Elizabeth and Jeremy followed their debut with the ‘Always’ EP in July 2012, five new songs that
saw the duo equally adept at melodious dancefloor fillers as guitar pop. Written on piano, the tracks, including singles ‘Life’ and
‘Always’, took on a life of their own in the studio, resulting in a set described as “LCD Soundsystem versus Donna Summer” by NME,
and “delirious disco-informed synthpop,” by Stereogum, who proclaimed it “the best thing they’ve ever done”.
Bar a run of festival shows, the rest of 2012 was spent writing the bulk of the songs that would become ‘Summer Camp’. In contrast
to the conceptual lyrics of their debut, this time around the pair began writing from a more personal place: “With this album, we
pushed ourselves to be more open, to portray our own emotions honestly rather than using fictional characters. The process was
difficult, tantrums were had, but ultimately we’re glad to have songs that more closely represent us, our friends, and being alive in
this decade.”
With their finest set of songs yet in the bag, they headed into the studio with legendary producer Stephen Street (The Smiths, Blur).
The result is an eleven-track marvel, cherry-picking the best bits of ‘Welcome To Condale’ and ‘Always’ , and weaving them into a
cohesive whole that is very much the sound of Summer Camp in 2013, a confident, fully-realised body of work that befits the cliche
‘all killer, no filler’. “This album is a statement of intent: this is us, take it or leave it…” says Jeremy. “… Please take it,” Elizabeth
adds.



Summer Camp

Summer Camp

FRYARS
Heaven
Wednesday 27 November 2013

£9.50 ADVANCE

We’re delighted to announce that Summer Camp will play a show at London’s Heaven

Summer Camp are Jeremy Warmsley and Elizabeth Sankey – the “head and heart” of the band respectively, as they describe
themselves – and ‘Summer Camp’ is the follow up to their debut ‘Welcome To Condale’, whose twelve tracks gave autumn 2011 a
welcome shot of sunshine with its gorgeous collection of lushly melodic pop songs woven around a central narrative of an imaginary
suburb deep in the heart of America, a cinematic microverse of teenage lovers and loners, high school freaks and geeks.
Never ones to rest on their laurels, Elizabeth and Jeremy followed their debut with the ‘Always’ EP in July 2012, five new songs that
saw the duo equally adept at melodious dancefloor fillers as guitar pop. Written on piano, the tracks, including singles ‘Life’ and
‘Always’, took on a life of their own in the studio, resulting in a set described as “LCD Soundsystem versus Donna Summer” by NME,
and “delirious disco-informed synthpop,” by Stereogum, who proclaimed it “the best thing they’ve ever done”.
Bar a run of festival shows, the rest of 2012 was spent writing the bulk of the songs that would become ‘Summer Camp’. In contrast
to the conceptual lyrics of their debut, this time around the pair began writing from a more personal place: “With this album, we
pushed ourselves to be more open, to portray our own emotions honestly rather than using fictional characters. The process was
difficult, tantrums were had, but ultimately we’re glad to have songs that more closely represent us, our friends, and being alive in
this decade.”
With their finest set of songs yet in the bag, they headed into the studio with legendary producer Stephen Street (The Smiths, Blur).
The result is an eleven-track marvel, cherry-picking the best bits of ‘Welcome To Condale’ and ‘Always’ , and weaving them into a
cohesive whole that is very much the sound of Summer Camp in 2013, a confident, fully-realised body of work that befits the cliche
‘all killer, no filler’. “This album is a statement of intent: this is us, take it or leave it…” says Jeremy. “… Please take it,” Elizabeth
adds.



Summer Camp

Summer Camp

FRYARS
Heaven
Wednesday 27 November 2013

£9.50 ADVANCE

We’re delighted to announce that Summer Camp will play a show at London’s Heaven

Summer Camp are Jeremy Warmsley and Elizabeth Sankey – the “head and heart” of the band respectively, as they describe
themselves – and ‘Summer Camp’ is the follow up to their debut ‘Welcome To Condale’, whose twelve tracks gave autumn 2011 a
welcome shot of sunshine with its gorgeous collection of lushly melodic pop songs woven around a central narrative of an imaginary
suburb deep in the heart of America, a cinematic microverse of teenage lovers and loners, high school freaks and geeks.
Never ones to rest on their laurels, Elizabeth and Jeremy followed their debut with the ‘Always’ EP in July 2012, five new songs that
saw the duo equally adept at melodious dancefloor fillers as guitar pop. Written on piano, the tracks, including singles ‘Life’ and
‘Always’, took on a life of their own in the studio, resulting in a set described as “LCD Soundsystem versus Donna Summer” by NME,
and “delirious disco-informed synthpop,” by Stereogum, who proclaimed it “the best thing they’ve ever done”.
Bar a run of festival shows, the rest of 2012 was spent writing the bulk of the songs that would become ‘Summer Camp’. In contrast
to the conceptual lyrics of their debut, this time around the pair began writing from a more personal place: “With this album, we
pushed ourselves to be more open, to portray our own emotions honestly rather than using fictional characters. The process was
difficult, tantrums were had, but ultimately we’re glad to have songs that more closely represent us, our friends, and being alive in
this decade.”
With their finest set of songs yet in the bag, they headed into the studio with legendary producer Stephen Street (The Smiths, Blur).
The result is an eleven-track marvel, cherry-picking the best bits of ‘Welcome To Condale’ and ‘Always’ , and weaving them into a
cohesive whole that is very much the sound of Summer Camp in 2013, a confident, fully-realised body of work that befits the cliche
‘all killer, no filler’. “This album is a statement of intent: this is us, take it or leave it…” says Jeremy. “… Please take it,” Elizabeth
adds.



Summer Camp

Summer Camp

FRYARS
Heaven
Wednesday 27 November 2013

£9.50 ADVANCE

We’re delighted to announce that Summer Camp will play a show at London’s Heaven

Summer Camp are Jeremy Warmsley and Elizabeth Sankey – the “head and heart” of the band respectively, as they describe
themselves – and ‘Summer Camp’ is the follow up to their debut ‘Welcome To Condale’, whose twelve tracks gave autumn 2011 a
welcome shot of sunshine with its gorgeous collection of lushly melodic pop songs woven around a central narrative of an imaginary
suburb deep in the heart of America, a cinematic microverse of teenage lovers and loners, high school freaks and geeks.
Never ones to rest on their laurels, Elizabeth and Jeremy followed their debut with the ‘Always’ EP in July 2012, five new songs that
saw the duo equally adept at melodious dancefloor fillers as guitar pop. Written on piano, the tracks, including singles ‘Life’ and
‘Always’, took on a life of their own in the studio, resulting in a set described as “LCD Soundsystem versus Donna Summer” by NME,
and “delirious disco-informed synthpop,” by Stereogum, who proclaimed it “the best thing they’ve ever done”.
Bar a run of festival shows, the rest of 2012 was spent writing the bulk of the songs that would become ‘Summer Camp’. In contrast
to the conceptual lyrics of their debut, this time around the pair began writing from a more personal place: “With this album, we
pushed ourselves to be more open, to portray our own emotions honestly rather than using fictional characters. The process was
difficult, tantrums were had, but ultimately we’re glad to have songs that more closely represent us, our friends, and being alive in
this decade.”
With their finest set of songs yet in the bag, they headed into the studio with legendary producer Stephen Street (The Smiths, Blur).
The result is an eleven-track marvel, cherry-picking the best bits of ‘Welcome To Condale’ and ‘Always’ , and weaving them into a
cohesive whole that is very much the sound of Summer Camp in 2013, a confident, fully-realised body of work that befits the cliche
‘all killer, no filler’. “This album is a statement of intent: this is us, take it or leave it…” says Jeremy. “… Please take it,” Elizabeth
adds.



Summer Camp

Summer Camp

FRYARS
Heaven
Wednesday 27 November 2013

£9.50 ADVANCE

We’re delighted to announce that Summer Camp will play a show at London’s Heaven

Summer Camp are Jeremy Warmsley and Elizabeth Sankey – the “head and heart” of the band respectively, as they describe
themselves – and ‘Summer Camp’ is the follow up to their debut ‘Welcome To Condale’, whose twelve tracks gave autumn 2011 a
welcome shot of sunshine with its gorgeous collection of lushly melodic pop songs woven around a central narrative of an imaginary
suburb deep in the heart of America, a cinematic microverse of teenage lovers and loners, high school freaks and geeks.
Never ones to rest on their laurels, Elizabeth and Jeremy followed their debut with the ‘Always’ EP in July 2012, five new songs that
saw the duo equally adept at melodious dancefloor fillers as guitar pop. Written on piano, the tracks, including singles ‘Life’ and
‘Always’, took on a life of their own in the studio, resulting in a set described as “LCD Soundsystem versus Donna Summer” by NME,
and “delirious disco-informed synthpop,” by Stereogum, who proclaimed it “the best thing they’ve ever done”.
Bar a run of festival shows, the rest of 2012 was spent writing the bulk of the songs that would become ‘Summer Camp’. In contrast
to the conceptual lyrics of their debut, this time around the pair began writing from a more personal place: “With this album, we
pushed ourselves to be more open, to portray our own emotions honestly rather than using fictional characters. The process was
difficult, tantrums were had, but ultimately we’re glad to have songs that more closely represent us, our friends, and being alive in
this decade.”
With their finest set of songs yet in the bag, they headed into the studio with legendary producer Stephen Street (The Smiths, Blur).
The result is an eleven-track marvel, cherry-picking the best bits of ‘Welcome To Condale’ and ‘Always’ , and weaving them into a
cohesive whole that is very much the sound of Summer Camp in 2013, a confident, fully-realised body of work that befits the cliche
‘all killer, no filler’. “This album is a statement of intent: this is us, take it or leave it…” says Jeremy. “… Please take it,” Elizabeth
adds.



Summer Camp

Summer Camp

FRYARS
Heaven
Wednesday 27 November 2013

£9.50 ADVANCE

We’re delighted to announce that Summer Camp will play a show at London’s Heaven

Summer Camp are Jeremy Warmsley and Elizabeth Sankey – the “head and heart” of the band respectively, as they describe
themselves – and ‘Summer Camp’ is the follow up to their debut ‘Welcome To Condale’, whose twelve tracks gave autumn 2011 a
welcome shot of sunshine with its gorgeous collection of lushly melodic pop songs woven around a central narrative of an imaginary
suburb deep in the heart of America, a cinematic microverse of teenage lovers and loners, high school freaks and geeks.
Never ones to rest on their laurels, Elizabeth and Jeremy followed their debut with the ‘Always’ EP in July 2012, five new songs that
saw the duo equally adept at melodious dancefloor fillers as guitar pop. Written on piano, the tracks, including singles ‘Life’ and
‘Always’, took on a life of their own in the studio, resulting in a set described as “LCD Soundsystem versus Donna Summer” by NME,
and “delirious disco-informed synthpop,” by Stereogum, who proclaimed it “the best thing they’ve ever done”.
Bar a run of festival shows, the rest of 2012 was spent writing the bulk of the songs that would become ‘Summer Camp’. In contrast
to the conceptual lyrics of their debut, this time around the pair began writing from a more personal place: “With this album, we
pushed ourselves to be more open, to portray our own emotions honestly rather than using fictional characters. The process was
difficult, tantrums were had, but ultimately we’re glad to have songs that more closely represent us, our friends, and being alive in
this decade.”
With their finest set of songs yet in the bag, they headed into the studio with legendary producer Stephen Street (The Smiths, Blur).
The result is an eleven-track marvel, cherry-picking the best bits of ‘Welcome To Condale’ and ‘Always’ , and weaving them into a
cohesive whole that is very much the sound of Summer Camp in 2013, a confident, fully-realised body of work that befits the cliche
‘all killer, no filler’. “This album is a statement of intent: this is us, take it or leave it…” says Jeremy. “… Please take it,” Elizabeth
adds.



Summer Camp

Summer Camp

FRYARS
Heaven
Wednesday 27 November 2013

£9.50 ADVANCE

We’re delighted to announce that Summer Camp will play a show at London’s Heaven

Summer Camp are Jeremy Warmsley and Elizabeth Sankey – the “head and heart” of the band respectively, as they describe
themselves – and ‘Summer Camp’ is the follow up to their debut ‘Welcome To Condale’, whose twelve tracks gave autumn 2011 a
welcome shot of sunshine with its gorgeous collection of lushly melodic pop songs woven around a central narrative of an imaginary
suburb deep in the heart of America, a cinematic microverse of teenage lovers and loners, high school freaks and geeks.
Never ones to rest on their laurels, Elizabeth and Jeremy followed their debut with the ‘Always’ EP in July 2012, five new songs that
saw the duo equally adept at melodious dancefloor fillers as guitar pop. Written on piano, the tracks, including singles ‘Life’ and
‘Always’, took on a life of their own in the studio, resulting in a set described as “LCD Soundsystem versus Donna Summer” by NME,
and “delirious disco-informed synthpop,” by Stereogum, who proclaimed it “the best thing they’ve ever done”.
Bar a run of festival shows, the rest of 2012 was spent writing the bulk of the songs that would become ‘Summer Camp’. In contrast
to the conceptual lyrics of their debut, this time around the pair began writing from a more personal place: “With this album, we
pushed ourselves to be more open, to portray our own emotions honestly rather than using fictional characters. The process was
difficult, tantrums were had, but ultimately we’re glad to have songs that more closely represent us, our friends, and being alive in
this decade.”
With their finest set of songs yet in the bag, they headed into the studio with legendary producer Stephen Street (The Smiths, Blur).
The result is an eleven-track marvel, cherry-picking the best bits of ‘Welcome To Condale’ and ‘Always’ , and weaving them into a
cohesive whole that is very much the sound of Summer Camp in 2013, a confident, fully-realised body of work that befits the cliche
‘all killer, no filler’. “This album is a statement of intent: this is us, take it or leave it…” says Jeremy. “… Please take it,” Elizabeth
adds.



Summer Camp

Summer Camp

FRYARS
Heaven
Wednesday 27 November 2013

£9.50 ADVANCE

We’re delighted to announce that Summer Camp will play a show at London’s Heaven

Summer Camp are Jeremy Warmsley and Elizabeth Sankey – the “head and heart” of the band respectively, as they describe
themselves – and ‘Summer Camp’ is the follow up to their debut ‘Welcome To Condale’, whose twelve tracks gave autumn 2011 a
welcome shot of sunshine with its gorgeous collection of lushly melodic pop songs woven around a central narrative of an imaginary
suburb deep in the heart of America, a cinematic microverse of teenage lovers and loners, high school freaks and geeks.
Never ones to rest on their laurels, Elizabeth and Jeremy followed their debut with the ‘Always’ EP in July 2012, five new songs that
saw the duo equally adept at melodious dancefloor fillers as guitar pop. Written on piano, the tracks, including singles ‘Life’ and
‘Always’, took on a life of their own in the studio, resulting in a set described as “LCD Soundsystem versus Donna Summer” by NME,
and “delirious disco-informed synthpop,” by Stereogum, who proclaimed it “the best thing they’ve ever done”.
Bar a run of festival shows, the rest of 2012 was spent writing the bulk of the songs that would become ‘Summer Camp’. In contrast
to the conceptual lyrics of their debut, this time around the pair began writing from a more personal place: “With this album, we
pushed ourselves to be more open, to portray our own emotions honestly rather than using fictional characters. The process was
difficult, tantrums were had, but ultimately we’re glad to have songs that more closely represent us, our friends, and being alive in
this decade.”
With their finest set of songs yet in the bag, they headed into the studio with legendary producer Stephen Street (The Smiths, Blur).
The result is an eleven-track marvel, cherry-picking the best bits of ‘Welcome To Condale’ and ‘Always’ , and weaving them into a
cohesive whole that is very much the sound of Summer Camp in 2013, a confident, fully-realised body of work that befits the cliche
‘all killer, no filler’. “This album is a statement of intent: this is us, take it or leave it…” says Jeremy. “… Please take it,” Elizabeth
adds.