Over three studio albums, one legendary lo-fi EP, and a handful of B-sides, Honey All Songs constructed a singular sonic universe. This article examines that universe track by track, tracing the band’s evolution from bedroom folk to orchestral pop. The Nectar EP (2011) The band’s debut, recorded in a converted storage unit, is where the seed of their concept first sprouted. Opening track "Slow Drip" is a manifesto: a single, fingerpicked acoustic guitar, Marsh’s whisper-to-croon vocal, and a lyric about watching honey slide down the side of a mug. "It takes forever to fall / and even longer to forget you at all," she sings. It’s a blueprint—patience as a musical virtue.
Critical reception was split. Pitchfork called it "beautifully suffocating," while The Needle Drop dismissed it as "aestheticized melancholy for people who own three different pour-over kettles." The band took the latter as a compliment. Album Two: Bitter Bloom (2016) The sophomore album saw the band expand their palette. "Pollen Drunk" introduces a baroque brass section—a flugelhorn and two bassoons—creating a drunken, swaying waltz. Marsh’s lyrics turn inward, examining the exhaustion of constant sweetness. "My tongue is tired of the taste," she admits over Adler’s harpsichord. It’s the sound of a band grappling with their own gimmick. honey all songs
But Honey All Songs left a curious legacy. Their work anticipated the "cottagecore" aesthetic, but with more anxiety. They proved that sweetness, in art, is not a lack of complexity—it is a complexity all its own. To listen to their discography in sequence is to watch a single metaphor stretched, stressed, and ultimately transformed into something fragile and true. Over three studio albums, one legendary lo-fi EP,