L.Y.R. release title track to forthcoming album

L.Y.R. will release their eagerly-awaited new album Dark Sky Reservation on 3rd April via Real World Records. The musical project of UK poet laureate Simon Armitage, producer and multi-instrumentalist Patrick J. Pearson and Grammy-nominated singer-songwriter Richard Walters, what began as a creative correspondence experiment, once described as a ‘genre-splicing supergroup’, has gone on to become a much loved, highly prolific and very real life band.

Following first single Blah! Blah! Blah!, today L.Y.R. share the LP’s stirring title track, Dark Sky Reservation, a piece which announces the album’s themes and moods.

The song refers to those geographical areas where light pollution is outlawed, where, on cloudless nights, we can see pinpricks and patterns of light that have been part of our consciousness since the dawn of humanity.
L.Y.R. love a contradiction and play with the idea that it’s only during the greatest darkness that we can perceive such vast distances. The song takes us beyond twilight, to the place where dreams begin and where fears and fantasies are amplified and magnified. Walters’ ethereal voice is full of self-doubt, and Armitage’s dryly spoken counterpart comes from a disappointed significant other, personalising the disquiet.
The song appears to practice evasion, accusation, apprehension and confession all at the same time, but heads willingly into the unknown…
Alongside the original recording, L.Y.R have also shared a more stripped-back but equally moving live version of Dark Sky Reservation, recorded outdoors for The Woodland Trust, the UK’s largest woodland conservation charity, dedicated to protecting, restoring, and creating native woodland to benefit nature, climate, and people.
Dark Sky Reservation (Woodland Trust Session)

L.Y.R UK Tour 2026:
Thurs 16 April – CAMBRIDGE – Storey’s Field Centre
Fri 17 April – KENDAL – Arts Centre
Sat 18 April – LIVERPOOL – Tung Auditorium
Sun 19 April – BIRMINGHAM – Bradshaw Hall
Tues 21 April – NOTTINGHAM – Squire Performing Arts Centre
Weds 22 April – GLASGOW – Cottiers
Thurs 23 April – GATESHEAD – Glasshouse Sage 2
Fri 24 April – POCKLINGTON – Pocklington Arts Centre
Sat 25 April – HEBDEN BRIDGE – Trades Club
Mon 4 May – LEEDS – City Varieties
Tues 5 May – BRISTOL – The Lantern
Weds 6 May – LONDON – ICA
Thurs 7 May – BRIGHTON – Komedia
Fri 8 May – EXETER – Mount Dinham
Sat 9 May – FALMOUTH – Cornish Bank at KCM church

Tickets here

Dark Sky Reservation, L.Y.R’s third commercial release, begins with the idea that the furthest points of light – stars – can only be seen in the dark. It’s a kind of contradiction that finds musical expression in these new tracks, the band always navigating towards sightings of hopefulness and constancy in an increasingly bewildering and storm-battered world. The term dark sky reservation has its origins in environmentalism, and several tracks on the album deal with the messed-up weather of our contemporary planet, both meteorological and psychological, from descriptions of an earth deluged by thunderstorms to the soggy back-gardens of suburbia, a climate crisis brought on by rampant urbanism. In that context, dark sky reservations are those regions of the landscape where light pollution is discouraged and even outlawed, to allow scientists and casual stargazers to peer into the cosmos and see the glory of the constellations, patterns of light that have entranced and mystified us for hundreds of thousands of years. It’s from those designated zones that human beings get a sense of their place in the universe, and experience the wonder of the here and now against a context of eternity and infinity.

An alternative to the hectic craziness of everyday life, so often virtual and synthetic, the dark sky reservation is a place of refuge and dreaming, and like L.Y.R.’s music, such spaces are earmarked for contemplation and thoughtfulness. Through the subtle lyrics of the title track the words take on another meaning, to do with doubt, uncertainty and hesitation – a questioning of the soul and the self.  The term reservation also hints at an appointment – a time and place, a remote location, after twilight – where music and language might rendezvous and combine to make something harmonious.

However much Armitage’s lyrics nag away at the conscience and observe the shaky human predicament, Pearson’s hypnotic, mesmerising compositions and Walters’ ethereal soaring vocals always reach for beauty and melody. Or when minor chords are struck in the music, Armitage’s poetry steers in the direction of consolation and redemption. So lovers try to connect in the alienating world of commercialised art (Guernica Jigsaw); the heavens open again (French Cursive) and again (A Walled Garden); a litany of metaphors honour those citizens of the world without a roof over their head (Eclipse); a collared dove throws off the shackles of its own name (Collared Dove); daydreaming is celebrated as an art form (Under Artificial Lighting); and the human heart shines brightly (Sirius Alpha, Sirius Beta). Out of the gathering dusk comes forth illumination.

  • Dark Sky Reservation

    L.Y.R.

    Released 03 April 2026

    The new album by L.Y.R., their third commercial release, begins with the idea that the furthest points of light - stars - can only be seen in the dark.  It’s a kind of contradiction that finds musical expression in these new tracks, the band always navigating towards sightings of hopefulness and constancy in an increasingly bewildering and storm-battered world. 

By Online Editor

Published on Wed, 18 February 26

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