Night Criu

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14.9929.99

Artist: Hilary Woods
Label: SACRED BONES
Genre: Rock
Format:CD
Format:Vinyl LP
Released:31st October 2025
Released:31st October 2025
Catalogue No:SBR374CD
Catalogue No:SBR374LPC3
Barcode:0843563189542
Barcode:0843563189535

Description:

Album of the Week – Hilary Woods – Night CRIÚ

Staff Review

Night CRIÚ is the fifth solo album from Hilary Woods, the Irish musician perhaps best known to most as the former bassist of one of Ireland’s most successful indie bands of the late ’90s and early 2000s, JJ72. Having once tasted fame as part of a charting indie-rock act in both Ireland and the UK, it is perhaps something of a shock to discover that Woods’ solo work bears almost no resemblance to the music of her former group.

Her solo discography, which includes Colt (2018), Birthmarks (2020), and Acts of Light (2023), all released via American independent label Sacred Bones Records, showcases a distinctive artistic transformation. Woods’ focus on atmosphere, ambience, and the murkier sides of human experience matches seamlessly with the Sacred Bones aesthetic, a label long associated with the eerie, the ethereal, and the emotionally unguarded.

With Night CRIÚ, her fourth release for the label, Woods paves a darkened path that returns toward something resembling traditional songwriting, following the largely instrumental and experimental soundscapes of Acts of Light. The result, which sees her emerging from the shadows and reawakening as a dream-folk singer, is nothing short of revelatory. The decision to enlist Dean Hurley (celebrated for his work with the late filmmaker David Lynch) as mixer and additional producer is inspired. Hurley’s textural sensibilities complement Woods’ otherworldly inclinations perfectly, and while Hurley may not have worked directly with her, it’s hard not to think of the haunting dream-pop of Julee Cruise’s songs in Twin Peaks.

Throughout Night CRIÚ, Woods conjures melodies as if from dreams, fragments of half-sleep and nocturnal reverie, songs to something, songs to no one, songs to nothing the waking mind can easily imagine. There’s a distinctly noirish, midnight quality to both her writing and performance, evoking strange, liminal moments when the body is tired but the mind remains wired.

Lead single Endgames unfurls from a funereal haze of drones and bass, with Woods’ choral-like, crystalline voice rising from the darkness like vapour. It’s evocative of Liz Harris (Grouper) at her most supernatural. Elsewhere, tracks such as Taper embrace a stripped-back palette, acoustic instrumentation paired with closely sung, layered, reverbed vocals that recall Broadcast’s folk-infused experiments at their most intimate.


Woods has also cited Czech cinema as an influence on the album, and given that parts of Night CRIÚ were recorded in Latvia, it’s no surprise that songs like the ritualistic opener Voce or the noir-folk of Brightly possess an occult, esoteric aura, evocative of the sort of mysticism often found in Eastern European folk traditions. Elsewhere, Faults makes use of funereal brass to stunning effect, and closing track Shelter swells with droning strings, together conjuring echoes of the stark, proto-gothic folk of Nico’s The Marble Index and Desertshore.

As with several standout releases of 2025, the glowing embers of two of the ’90s most distinctive genres, shoegaze-dream-pop and slowcore, flicker subtly throughout Night CRIÚ, lending it a gauzy, dreamlike foundation. The result is an album that feels both ancient and modern, a work of haunted beauty that exists entirely out of time, testament to the mesmeric allure of Woods’ chimerical, illusory songs.

Hilary Woods – Night CRIÚ is out now on vinyl & CD.

 

Following two acclaimed experimental instrumental records in Feral Hymns (2021) and Acts of Light (2023), Hilary Woods returns on her new LP Night CRIÚ, out October 31st, to song form and most notably, to her voice. Crafting songs centered around it, Night CRIÚ’s intimate ecosystem of seven songs uses layers of vocal harmony and lyrics as ways to re-enter the body, and to speak to and uproot old scripts.

A ceremony of light and shade, Night CRIÚ’s unmoored sonic threads recall the cracks, fringes, forgotten agency and dormant personas that surface at night, waiting to be retrieved and integrated come daylight. Despite its economy, each song on Night CRIÚ breathes into an emotive expanse quintessential of Woods’s compositions, and true to her artistry, a search for new direction is ever present, expressed most keenly here in her writing for brass band and children’s choir.

A record that riles against bludgeoning monoculture in its reclaiming and mourning a lost innocence all at once, Night CRIÚ reaches to integrate lost and splintered parts of the whole, in making the unconscious conscious. Lyrically Woods subverts and reconfigures the inter-personal, her words serving as mottled photographic close-ups planted in the dark to bloom upward toward the light.

Inspired and energised by many influences including aspects of Czech and early Italian cinema, the revival of indigenous language, a personal history of attending parades, early music, the joy in dance, the immediacy of sound, and the present collective standing up for what it means to be human in the face of tyranny and oppression, Night CRIÚ was recorded between the West Coast of Ireland, Dublin, London, Latvia and Richmond Virginia between 2023 and January 2025.

These songs were chosen from many early home recordings that Woods held up as mirrors of juxtaposition to each other. Written and produced by Hilary Woods, Night CRIÚ was mixed by Dean Hurley with additional production by Oliver Turvey and Dean Hurley, mastered by Brian Lucey, featuring work by Hannah FallonGabriel FerrandiniThe Hangleton brass band and Ajo Gonsenica.

For Woods “Each record is a life buoy, a raft, a snapshot, a marker in the sand, a date that requires me to meet it. Making records is a way of being”. 

Tracks:

1. Voce (5:03 )
2. Faults (5:32)
3. Endgames (6:14)
4. Brightly (4:03)
5. Taper (4:44)
6. Offerings (2:32)
7. Shelter (3:14)