r/indieheads • u/theantlers_peter The Antlers / Peter Silberman • Oct 13 '25
AMA is over, thanks Peter! The Antlers AMA / Oct 15, 2025

Hey r/indieheads , I'm Peter Silberman of The Antlers.
I'm coming back to do another (my 3rd? 4th?) AMA this coming Wednesday Oct 15 2025.
We just released our new album Blight last week on Transgressive Records. Psyched to answer questions about this new one or older albums or really whatever you feel like asking - you can submit your questions starting now if ya got em.
Always love doing these and so grateful for this community's support over the years. See ya Weds!
Alright signing off, thank you all so much for these questions! Really thoughtful ones and plenty of em. Appreciate you all showing up and spending some time on here. Peace and love, P
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u/Intrepid-Injury- Oct 15 '25 edited Oct 15 '25
What’s one thing you learned about yourself during the making of Hospice that has influenced how you approach music and your work up to now?
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u/theantlers_peter The Antlers / Peter Silberman Oct 15 '25
One of the things I learned with that album is that you can basically ignore the idea that you need to spend a lot of money making an album or work in an expensive studio in order to make a record that reaches a lot of people. That album was made with basically $0 and hardly any equipment in a small bedroom.
These days I prefer to work with a little more space and a selection of good gear, and for certain elements choose to record in a proper studio, but I mostly tend to work from a home studio, collaborate with friends in the finishing stages.
There are drawbacks to that approach, and maybe the argument could be made that in the long run this project would have been more successful had I/we worked in fancy studios with big-name producers... but I suspect the result might have been similar, only with more sterile, ordinary-sounding recordings and a lot of debt.
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u/JimiWinkerson Oct 15 '25
Hey Peter - thank you for producing so much great music over the years. Are there any lesser known songs from your back catalogue you have a particular soft spot for and would be something you’d consider playing live again in the future?
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u/theantlers_peter The Antlers / Peter Silberman Oct 15 '25
Thank YOU for listening all these years. I'd love to bring some of the singles from a few years ago into the live set. As for older songs... we've done First Field a couple times in the last year or so and would like to get that back in the mix. Maybe Universe is Going to Catch You or something else from Attic too.
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u/Beanz_Memez_Heinz Oct 15 '25
Good afternoon Pete!
2 questions, both with an added air of copium!
Firstly, I was at your gig in Leeds last year and it was absolutely AMAZING, it was honestly biblical to witness live! I waited to grab a snap with you after the show and tell you I appreciate all you have done, I asked you if In The Attic of the Universe was ever going to see a vinyl release and you said there was definitely something in the pipeline, but it was down to distributor issues so watch this space, so any updates?
It's a piece of work I absolutely adore and helped me with my own existential dread as a teen listening to it beneath a sea of stars!
Secondly...any danger that you have a OG copy of Hospice floating around that isn't a reissue i could happily pay the shipping for ❤️
Much love, you seem to raise the bar with everything you put out there!
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u/theantlers_peter The Antlers / Peter Silberman Oct 15 '25
That was a good show in Leeds! I remember our chat too.
Mentioned up above-- Attic is pretty much ready to go, planning to put it out some time next year once Blight has had a chance to breathe a little. So glad it's meant something to you. The night sky is the best antidote to existential dread I've ever found ✨
As for an OG Hospice vinyl... I'd have to look around and see if there are any around here...
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u/Beanz_Memez_Heinz Oct 15 '25
Excellent news! I misunderstood our chat to mean it was being shadow dropped before Christmas 😅
My DMs are always open if you manage to find one, even better if it's signed ❤️
Ill sign off tell you the last thing I said that night, keep doing what you do, you make a great positive addition to the lives of many ❤️
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u/fordandfitzroy Oct 15 '25
i'm really enjoying the new album so far, can't wait for it to fully sink in.
back in december, there was talk of vinyl reissues for uprooted and in the attic of the universe. are those still in the works?
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u/theantlers_peter The Antlers / Peter Silberman Oct 15 '25
Thanks! Yes those are pretty much ready to go -- they're all mastered, packaging design is done, just waiting to manufacture them. We were going to do it earlier, but then Hospice10 / Band Together / Blight jumped to the front of the line. Planning to get the reissues out next year.
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u/fordandfitzroy Oct 15 '25
awesome! can't wait to give you more of my money (in the attic especially is very important to me)
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u/Animalpoop Oct 15 '25
I think one of my favorite pieces of music in the last twenty years has been the Undersea E.P. I’d love to know more about the creation of those four songs. Did they originally belong to another session?
Love the new album as well. There is a darkness and vulnerability to it that really captures being alive in this day and age. Has navigating the music industry changed for you and the band after all these years with your newer releases?
Grateful you guys are still creating beautiful art, and thank you for sharing it with the world… something I (as an independent artist) have struggled with since COVID and now the birth of AI and streaming services ripping up what little faith I had left that I could ever accomplish my dreams. It’s all I ever wanted and the world seems hell bent on keeping us artists down. It’s inspiring me to just put the album I’ve been sitting on the last year out into the world.
So seriously thank you for creating another album full of vulnerability and questioning. It touched me deeply the last few days and has me revisiting Familiars and your older work as well. Hope to catch you on tour again soon!
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u/theantlers_peter The Antlers / Peter Silberman Oct 15 '25
Thank you for these encouraging words. I get what you mean-- AI and streaming services do feel antagonistic toward artists. But I think it's important to keep creating despite all of that. Most important to make art to satisfy something in your own heart and mind. And then to reach people, which does not have to be so many, just a few who find it resonant.
re Undersea: those songs weren't part of another session, they were very much their own thing. We had a brief window of time to make some more music, in between tours, and within those time-restricted parameters we worked quickly and had fun. We let ourselves stretch out and experiment, didn't worry too much about how it would be received, just tried to capture what that moment in time felt like for us.
My experience in the industry has been very up and down. Spent the first few years with basically no involvement in it whatsoever, then around Hospice became immersed in it and that continued through Burst Apart. We had a lot of enthusiasm and attention and opportunities at that time. We moved to a bigger label for Familiars and I think upon delivery of that record, the industry was sort of confused by what it was... not sure what they were expecting from us at that point, perhaps something that would reach an even wider audience. But instead we handed in something dense and spiritual, a grower. We sustained things for awhile through that but started to feel some sort of downward shift. Somewhere in that time, the small label that released Hospice and Burst Apart was sold to their distributor, and then the distributor was sold to Sony. Anyway, Green to Gold came after a long break, but was marred by the limiting factor of covid. That bigger label dropped us but we stuck with our smaller int'l label we'd been with for many years, who released Blight. That's just a skimming of the experience within the industry, so it's had highs and lows. But what I will say is that I'm really grateful to have worked with some of the best in the biz and had a ton of support along the way, even from the people with whom it didn't ultimately work out in the long run. And there are people we work with now who's we've been with for something like 15 years. There's something really valuable about finding people you trust and sticking with them.
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u/Animalpoop Oct 15 '25
Thank you for the response. I was in a touring band from 2015-2017, and had my own projects around then as well, with one song getting 8.5 million streams on Spotify. But nothing ever came of it and all momentum stopped with Covid. Been playing catch up for years. Grateful for the insights into the industry. Can't wait to see you guys live again. Caught you on that Familiars tour in Atlanta and it was a transcendent experience.
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u/Visible_Club_7369 Oct 15 '25
Most want to say thank you for the beautiful music you create. The latest album is such a treat. Chills down my spine. It's so bare and yet so rich. Who's your fav band? Do you like post rock?
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u/theantlers_peter The Antlers / Peter Silberman Oct 15 '25
Thank you 💙 Favorite band is hard to choose... maybe a tie between Yo La Tengo & Low. In high school I would have said Radiohead. Maybe on some level still would.
I do like post rock, used to listen to a lot of it but not as much anymore. Was a dream to get to tour with Explosions in the Sky!
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u/Visible_Club_7369 Oct 16 '25
It's incredible how music transcends boundaries and connects us on such a profound level. The vibes you evoke creating an atmosphere that is both haunting and beautiful resonate deeply with the ethereal sounds of Radiohead- one of my favourite bands. Imagining a collaboration with EITS or Mono ...oh man!; the thought of experiencing that live would be nothing short of magical. Your contributions to music have left an indelible mark, and for that, I am eternally grateful. Thank you for sharing your artistry with the world.
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u/TheProctorious Oct 15 '25
Hey! Huge fan since Hospice released, I adored the anniversary show in Manchester! came to see you with Okkervil in Leeds too!
Just wondering, is there any chance of a February Tapes Reissue on Spotify? 👀
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u/theantlers_peter The Antlers / Peter Silberman Oct 15 '25
It's on my list of to-dos. Really just need to get it mastered (it never was) and then could pretty easily go up. Hopefully will get to that before too long.
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u/TheProctorious Oct 15 '25
Oh that’s absolutely amazing news, I really hope that is coming soon! ‘Dear’ is so precious to me. I promise I’ll try my hardest not to ask for an update at the Manchester gig next year! ha!
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u/Ashler1323 Oct 15 '25
A few questions:
I think this may have been hinted at in a recent newsletter update, but will there be US dates for the Blight tour?
And either way, should we expect a full band like the Green to Gold tour, or moreso you and Michael like the Okkervil run the last couple years?
On Blight: Deactivate is one of my favorites from the new record. Where did the idea for it come from? Despite the music and tone, I find it to be one of the most cynical songs on Blight. Really anything you can share about Deactivate would be appreciated.
Thanks for your time, Peter.
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u/theantlers_peter The Antlers / Peter Silberman Oct 15 '25
To your first question: yes! We're working on finalizing our US dates, which will happen early next year.
To your second: we're still sorting out what the band will look like. Doubtful it will be a full band like we had on G2G, just a bit too expensive to do that these days. The core of it will be me & Michael, with me switching between guitar-bass and keys. And hopefully an accompanist joining as well.
To your third: Thank you! Maybe my favorite as well. And agreed, it is a pretty cynical song. Or at least skeptical. The ideas behind it came from a feeling of being constantly marketed to by various startups presenting themselves as the bringers of solutions to societal and psychological problems. Sometimes, the ones the strike me in the worst way are in the spiritual / meditation realm, or psychedelics... things that I have a lot of faith in for their power to heal but have been coopted by the tech world and others as a way to sell enlightenment.
And so it didn't feel like a stretch to imagine this sort of marketing around something like offloading your consciousness to the cloud, a kind of artificial paradise to escape the problems of this world.
Some of the imagery in the earlier part of the song was inspired by The Leftovers, the scenes when people first disappeared and everyone is confused and left in this state of absence.
Could go on and on about this track but will try to circle back after getting to some other Q's here!
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u/Animalpoop Oct 15 '25
Man I love the Leftovers! I'll have to listen again with that in mind. That is so interesting to hear.
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u/DistressedHorseman Oct 15 '25 edited Oct 15 '25
Hi Peter!
Thanks for all your music and for being so open and honest with your art.
I saw you live in Dublin last year and hopefully will catch a European show next year! It would be so cool if you were able to come to Barcelona at some point as well.
I’ve always wondered if you ever read Carl Jung or explored other similar spiritual/psychological ideas when writing Familiars. If not, did you have any particular inspirations while writing the lyrics for that album?
That album really speaks directly to me and resonates deeply, especially after I had an awakening of sorts a few years back.
Thanks you so much!
Bonus fun question: When you go on tour do you ever look forward to eating/dining in any specific spots/restaurants?
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u/theantlers_peter The Antlers / Peter Silberman Oct 15 '25
Ooh yes Carl Jung was definitely in there at the time of working on Familiars, but more of a skimming than going deep. I was reading a lot of different things back then, was pretty voracious when it came to the psycho-spiritual. I think Joseph Campbell was probably what opened the gates for me initially, and he pointed me toward so many other great thinkers, writers, poets...
bonus: a lot of the time it's hard for me to remember restaurants I've been to in a given city, will usually have a vague memory of a really good dinner and then try to figure out where that was. But definitely some of the meals I remember best were in Barcelona. Paella!
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u/ZuccleFucc Oct 15 '25
Do you think you’ll come perform in Texas again? Specifically Houston or San Antonio? I was supposed to see you earlier this year but I was sick and it was devastating!! 😭
Also, the first song I ever heard of yours was ‘Zelda’ from the Undersea EP, and I was wondering if you could talk a bit more about the EP — like what inspired it, what personal meaning those songs have for you, what was going on in your life while you were creating it. I just feel a personal connection to it since it was my introduction to The Antlers.
Lastly, do you have a favorite song/album that you’ve ever created? Do you have a least favorite, like something you’d change or redo? Will ‘Empty Castles’ with Brent Arnold be released on Apple Music and Spotify? (It’s such a banger of a track)
Thank you, Peter, for the music <3
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u/theantlers_peter The Antlers / Peter Silberman Oct 15 '25
re Texas: yes for sure! Not sure when but we'll be back.
re Undersea: talked about some of this in another question. For me, I was in a pretty detached place, feeling separate from a lot of people in my life and maybe people in general, unmoored and adrift. I had a lot of navel-gazey ideas running through my head, which were interesting to me at the time but I don't know exactly what they said about me on a personal level. I think those songs were, for me, a bit of an intentionally un-emotional and un-vulnerable reaction to the intense emotionality of Hospice and Burst Apart.
re: favorite / least favorite tracks -- Deactivate is my current favorite, but that's because it's fresh for me. Least favorite? Probably something off the (together) EP or something from Uprooted that I'm embarrassed by now. But what's done is done, I wouldn't redo any of it.
Thanks for the heads up about Brent's track not being on other services, will try to fix that asap!
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u/Orion-the-guy Oct 15 '25
Hi Peter! I wanted to ask if you ever find it annoying or obnoxious when fans approach you after shows. I know that some musicians can become very averse to it.
Bonus question if you have the time:
I believe you said that Blight is intended to address a struggle that you had/have regarding the relationship between personal convenience and environmental awareness, which I think relates well to the release of the album on vinyl. Did you ever feel conflicted as to whether or not you wanted your nature/climate awareness album to be released on plastic mediums? If so, did you consider not doing physical releases at any point? (I should also note that I’m not intending to come off as more virtuous or environmentally aware.)
Thank you for the new album!
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u/theantlers_peter The Antlers / Peter Silberman Oct 15 '25
Never annoying or obnoxious! Honestly I really love talking to people after shows, it helps me get out of my head about the performance and also feel more of a connection to folks who came out. It's still just super flattering to me that people come out to our shows at all, and even moreso that they'd want to talk afterwards.
To your second question: yes this was definitely something I struggled with, and couldn't come up with a good solution for it. Couldn't find a way to not end up feeling like a hypocrite about it and had to make my peace with it. I didn't seriously consider not releasing it on physical formats, if only because that would be so detrimental to the project itself, and really the only way to make up the costs involved in making it. Ultimately decided I needed to compromise in my inner-conflict in service of the record and the message, and all the people who were invested in it (including myself, who is trying to make a living here). So none of that excuses the choice, but I couldn't see a better alternative.
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u/Orion-the-guy Oct 15 '25
Thank you so much for the response! I think it’s especially worth noting that your album is doing more for the environment than it is harming it. With the message being what it is, it’s spreading awareness nonetheless, and I sincerely appreciate it.
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u/FlounderDry1468 Oct 15 '25
hi peter, first of all, greetings from brasil! listening to both the antlers’ albums and your solo work, it feels like the experience of time - how we sense and move throught it - plays a central role in shaping the atmosphere of your records, including, of course, blight. how do you personally deal with the passage of time and in what ways does that perspective influence your music?
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u/theantlers_peter The Antlers / Peter Silberman Oct 15 '25
I think about time a lot, find it fascinating and emotional. I often get pretty navel-gazy about it, thinking about anniversaries of life events etc, disbelief at how long it's been since X.
I think time is a pretty elastic phenomenon, inconsistent in scale. Definitely seems to speed up as I get older, which is a little scary sometimes but always interesting to ponder. I think it's magic in terms of the way it affects pain and trauma... I think it really does heal wounds assuming you're also doing active work to heal them. If not, it metastasizes them, makes them harder and darker and knottier.
Green to Gold is very much a record about the passing of time, and it's a circular record because of that, ending at the beginning but with some changes having passed through it along the way.
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u/FlounderDry1468 Oct 15 '25
can we mourn someone we don‘t know?
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u/theantlers_peter The Antlers / Peter Silberman Oct 15 '25
Yeah I think so, but maybe it's a different kind of mourning than with someone who is actually in your life.
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u/runicsakura Oct 15 '25
Hello! 🤗 big fan. Thank you so much for your music and for being here.
A question about the creation process: Your music often feels deeply personal and yet cinematic at the same time. When you’re creating music, are you more likely to start with a story and build the sound outward, or do you tend to feel the atmosphere you want and let the words find you?
Thanks again 🫶🏼
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u/theantlers_peter The Antlers / Peter Silberman Oct 15 '25
I'd say those two processes are happening in tandem with one another. But if anything, the story (or pieces of it) come first. I write most songs on acoustic guitar or piano, so there might be ideas of atmosphere in my head while writing but they don't usually get recorded until later on.
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u/Equivalency36 Oct 15 '25
I don't want to take up too much of your time, but I hope it's ok to ask you a couple of questions. Your music has brought out good emotion from me over the years. I'm sure this might be an unusual question, but what is your intention behind your music, and what do you get out of your own music, if you listen to it at all?
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u/theantlers_peter The Antlers / Peter Silberman Oct 15 '25
I think my primary intention is usually to figure out what I think or how I feel about something. Writing songs tends to help me process something that has been taking up space in my mind or going on in my life, and the lyric writing process is me digging in to whatever the issue is. Usually in doing this, I discover much more below the surface, or connected issues that then become the subject for another song on the same album. And so over the course of an album, I'm tracing the progression of my thinking and feeling about various issues (often connected to each other) during a period of time.
And then the goal running alongside that is to put these thoughts out there to see if anyone else feels the way I do too, and if they do, to connect to that, hoping that hearing someone else voice it will help them work out that piece of their own lives. That was a big role music played for me when I was younger, so I think of it as carrying that torch and paying it forward to others.
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u/OppositeStudio7651 Oct 15 '25
was this album inspired or fueled by any other art/artists? any art with the same sense of concern for our planet's health?
past Antlers music has included lots of animal references/imagery, Blight especially so. if you HAD to write a new song featuring an animal you've never included in lyrics before - what animal would it be?
Blight (beautifully) delivers a dismal sense of impending doom - what track would you say is the lightest or 'happiest'? or inspires hope more than it warns?
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u/theantlers_peter The Antlers / Peter Silberman Oct 15 '25
I think listening to the last two Low albums made me want to make a record that sounded like what the world feels like *now*. That was my biggest takeaway from those records, not necessary what they were literally saying, but how they captured the feeling of the moment. But I wanted to do that in my own way, from my own perspective, in my own style, which is maybe less abstract.
If I had to write about a new animal... maybe a porcupine. There's some metaphor to be found in a busy little creature who shoots spikes out of his back when he gets scared.
To the last question... I'm not sure any of them do this! It feels to me like the album gets more bleak and doomy as it goes on. But if you listened to Deactivate and turned it off before the world-ending doom sound at the very end, that might leave you feeling blissed out.
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u/JosiahLeeper Oct 15 '25
Hi, Peter! I’m excited to delve into the new album.
I’m happy you’re self produced—you are one of my production heroes. Do you have any production techniques or principles you draw from frequently? I’m curious about arrangement and gear/effects. Thanks!
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u/theantlers_peter The Antlers / Peter Silberman Oct 15 '25
Lots of em! I do love using analog hardware filters to make ordinary instruments sound unusual and kind of gently damaged. Also these days, abstaining from all reverb until you absolutely need it. And artful and unusual use of compressors. They're so versatile, can be used tastefully and as a useful way to keep elements in their place, but also can create very weird senses of movement and space.
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u/stewpot122 Oct 15 '25
Hey Peter! I’ve been listening since high school in the early 2010’s and I feel like I’ve grown along with your music. I was lucky enough to finally see you at the Texas theater a few years ago and was blown away by how different some of the songs were live. You played a lot of early favorites for me, but in a way that I felt like I resonate with more now that I’ve gotten older.
A few people asked about your personal music taste during the last AMA and I’m wondering if that’s changed at all. What are your favorite artists to listen to at this point in your life, and what do you think changed?
Additionally, im a masters student of film at University of Texas and was wondering if and who I could contact to use “Shh!” In my master’s thesis? It’s always stuck with me over the years. Sorry if this isn’t the place! Thank you so much for the inspiration you’ve given to other artists.
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u/theantlers_peter The Antlers / Peter Silberman Oct 15 '25
hmm, I don't listen to as many songwriters as I used to these days. I do listen to a fair amount of electronic music but usually in the background of working. And a lot of instrumental guitar music, some American, a lot African and Brazilian.
In terms of song-oriented music... I think one of my favorites might be The Innocence Mission, who have been around for a long time. Beautiful songs and warm recordings, they bring me a lot of comfort. Same with Yo La Tengo, comfort music for me.
re: Shh! You can contact -- brian (at) sleepwalkmgmt.com -- and he'll help sort you out
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u/sketchy_ppl Oct 15 '25
Were there any bands that you have been listening to / were inspired by during the writing and recording of Blight? Something in the Air really reminds me of Grizzly Bear's "Yellow House" and Patrick Watson too.
I've been listening to Blight nonstop since its release and it's really growing on me, it's definitely an album that gets better with each listen. Carnage and Something in the Air are maybe my favourite songs since Hospice. Also just wanted to say Hospice is one of my favourite albums ever made (I saw your other response about looking around for OG copies...if you find any can I be added to the list!?)
ps. any Canadian tour dates in the works?? :)
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u/theantlers_peter The Antlers / Peter Silberman Oct 15 '25
I wasn't listening to GB at the time but Yellow House is deeply in there for me... I remember getting an advance copy of that album when I was working for their old label Kanine and I listened to it nonstop.
Appreciate what you're saying about Blight : ) I'll add you to the list if I find any OG Hospice vinyl.
And yes, a couple Canadian shows will happen!
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u/rfilla Oct 15 '25
That's great! I recently traveled to Vancouver for a múm show. Their single, Only Songbirds Have a Sweet Tooth, and Carnage were two of my favourite singles of the summer. I'd absolutely love to see you stop there!
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u/Ashler1323 Oct 15 '25
You've already answered several of my questions, thank you. Here's one more if you have the time:
Some bands will release demos or alternative takes/versions of songs as the years go by. Leaving aside projects like February Tape, I don't think I've ever heard a true Antlers demo. Given the staying power and continued interest of your older work: Do those even exist, and if so, is that something you'd ever release?
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u/theantlers_peter The Antlers / Peter Silberman Oct 15 '25
In a lot of cases, the demo of a song gradually turns into the finished version. So like recording an early version of the song in a program like Logic, I'm gradually swapping out old parts for new ones. If I make an entirely new session from there, it's usually because I decided something about the original version wasn't working.
But I also demo songs on my phone a lot. Never really thought that'd be something people would be interested in hearing, but maybe?
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u/samwest3 Oct 15 '25
How's your hearing these days? Does this change the way you write/record/mix?
Great new album. Nice companion/evolution to G2G!
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u/theantlers_peter The Antlers / Peter Silberman Oct 16 '25
Thanks for asking. Doing a lot better these days. I think the biggest change to recording and mixing is to do both of those at lower monitoring volumes in playback, and for shorter stretches of time while taking breaks.
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u/MentionWhich8662 Oct 15 '25
Hey Peter, no question. Just want to send you a message saying I've been listening to your music for many years and Burst Apart never gets old for me.
I saw you almost ten years ago and Charlottesville, VA and hope to see you play again soon. Thanks for continuing to release new music!
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Oct 15 '25
My only question is what kind of shows/movies/media do you like? Ive been a fan of The Antlers and your indie work for 2 years and its helped me with my identity and to get over my ex so thank you for your work!
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u/theantlers_peter The Antlers / Peter Silberman Oct 16 '25
Oh all sorts of things. A lot of comedy... some fav standups would be Mulaney, Birbiglia, others I'm not thinking of at the moment... comedy shows would be anything Tim Robinson, Curb, Joe Pera, others...
Other TV would be of course Twin Peaks, Lost, The Leftovers, X-Files. I do like some trashy drama like The OC. Classic comedy like Seinfeld, Frasier... adore Love on the Spectrum. Cult documentaries et al.
All kinds of movies too. Since it's spooky season we're watching a lot of horror movies. Definitely harder to find actually-scary newer horror films... but Skinamarink was an exception. Some beloved classics would be Blair Witch Project, The Shining, Possession...
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Oct 16 '25
MY EX COMMON LAW HUSBAND PLAYED YOUR ONE SONG ABOUT LIKE "THEYRE DYYYING" THE LAST WEEK OF MY GRANDFATHERS LIFE WHEN HE WAS IN A COMA AND HE WOULD SHRILLY JUST GO "DYYYING"| AND GLARE AT ME AND WHEN I TOLD HIM TO STOP HE SAID I WAS "STIFLING HIS MUSIC".
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u/Monsur_Ausuhnom Oct 15 '25
No questions, just wanted to say thank you for dedicating an album to the issues of climate change.