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Share Your Care
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Share Your Care in Chattanooga, TN
Current price: $17.99

Barnes and Noble
Share Your Care in Chattanooga, TN
Current price: $17.99
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Size: CD
On her previous solo albums, including her 2017 full-length debut (
Consume Me
) and her 2019
Bella Union
label debut (
Vanishing Lands
) -- her only two albums under the alias
Dog in the Snow
before switching to her own name --
Helen Ganya
established an inventive combination of dream pop and more angular indie electronica as a setting for her introspective and observational songs. A U.K. native based in Brighton,
Ganya
grew up mostly in Singapore and spent her summers visiting her mother's side of the family in Thailand. Her anchor to Thailand, her grandmother, died in 2021. With her fourth album,
Share Your Care
,
not only reflects on those summers in Thailand but pays tribute to her grandmother, extended family, and her own identity with a shift in sound that adds a strong Thai music influence, including traditional Thai instruments, to her already high-contrast sound. In preparation for recording the album, she and her co-producer,
Rob Flynn
, visited Buddhapadipa Temple in Wimbledon, where they met
Artit Phonron
, who went on to play percussion and stringed instruments like ranat ek, saw duang, and khim on some tracks. Other contributors include
Chinnathip Poollap
on pi (Thai oboe) and
John "Rittipo" Moore
on woodwinds.
kicks off
with the Thai-suffused rock instrumental "Weera," a prologue with the attention-grabbing drama of a lights-lowering apron scene. She then delves into the celebratory, blurting art dance-rock of "Share Your Care," whose blown-out bass, pounding percussion, and layered flute-like accompaniment entwine Eastern and Western influences in a way that compels throughout the entire album. (The record's 13 tracks also include three short documentary-style audio clips of conversations and city noise.) Taken together,
is mostly danceable, consistently eccentric, and often at once biographical and fantastical, with
considering reincarnation on "Chaiyo!" and the afterlife on "Hell Money" amid personal, familial reflections. Also included is an appearance by British Nigerian experimental musician
Tony Njoku
, who plays
's late grandfather on "Myna," enabling a posthumous conversation between the two. ~ Marcy Donelson
Consume Me
) and her 2019
Bella Union
label debut (
Vanishing Lands
) -- her only two albums under the alias
Dog in the Snow
before switching to her own name --
Helen Ganya
established an inventive combination of dream pop and more angular indie electronica as a setting for her introspective and observational songs. A U.K. native based in Brighton,
Ganya
grew up mostly in Singapore and spent her summers visiting her mother's side of the family in Thailand. Her anchor to Thailand, her grandmother, died in 2021. With her fourth album,
Share Your Care
,
not only reflects on those summers in Thailand but pays tribute to her grandmother, extended family, and her own identity with a shift in sound that adds a strong Thai music influence, including traditional Thai instruments, to her already high-contrast sound. In preparation for recording the album, she and her co-producer,
Rob Flynn
, visited Buddhapadipa Temple in Wimbledon, where they met
Artit Phonron
, who went on to play percussion and stringed instruments like ranat ek, saw duang, and khim on some tracks. Other contributors include
Chinnathip Poollap
on pi (Thai oboe) and
John "Rittipo" Moore
on woodwinds.
kicks off
with the Thai-suffused rock instrumental "Weera," a prologue with the attention-grabbing drama of a lights-lowering apron scene. She then delves into the celebratory, blurting art dance-rock of "Share Your Care," whose blown-out bass, pounding percussion, and layered flute-like accompaniment entwine Eastern and Western influences in a way that compels throughout the entire album. (The record's 13 tracks also include three short documentary-style audio clips of conversations and city noise.) Taken together,
is mostly danceable, consistently eccentric, and often at once biographical and fantastical, with
considering reincarnation on "Chaiyo!" and the afterlife on "Hell Money" amid personal, familial reflections. Also included is an appearance by British Nigerian experimental musician
Tony Njoku
, who plays
's late grandfather on "Myna," enabling a posthumous conversation between the two. ~ Marcy Donelson
On her previous solo albums, including her 2017 full-length debut (
Consume Me
) and her 2019
Bella Union
label debut (
Vanishing Lands
) -- her only two albums under the alias
Dog in the Snow
before switching to her own name --
Helen Ganya
established an inventive combination of dream pop and more angular indie electronica as a setting for her introspective and observational songs. A U.K. native based in Brighton,
Ganya
grew up mostly in Singapore and spent her summers visiting her mother's side of the family in Thailand. Her anchor to Thailand, her grandmother, died in 2021. With her fourth album,
Share Your Care
,
not only reflects on those summers in Thailand but pays tribute to her grandmother, extended family, and her own identity with a shift in sound that adds a strong Thai music influence, including traditional Thai instruments, to her already high-contrast sound. In preparation for recording the album, she and her co-producer,
Rob Flynn
, visited Buddhapadipa Temple in Wimbledon, where they met
Artit Phonron
, who went on to play percussion and stringed instruments like ranat ek, saw duang, and khim on some tracks. Other contributors include
Chinnathip Poollap
on pi (Thai oboe) and
John "Rittipo" Moore
on woodwinds.
kicks off
with the Thai-suffused rock instrumental "Weera," a prologue with the attention-grabbing drama of a lights-lowering apron scene. She then delves into the celebratory, blurting art dance-rock of "Share Your Care," whose blown-out bass, pounding percussion, and layered flute-like accompaniment entwine Eastern and Western influences in a way that compels throughout the entire album. (The record's 13 tracks also include three short documentary-style audio clips of conversations and city noise.) Taken together,
is mostly danceable, consistently eccentric, and often at once biographical and fantastical, with
considering reincarnation on "Chaiyo!" and the afterlife on "Hell Money" amid personal, familial reflections. Also included is an appearance by British Nigerian experimental musician
Tony Njoku
, who plays
's late grandfather on "Myna," enabling a posthumous conversation between the two. ~ Marcy Donelson
Consume Me
) and her 2019
Bella Union
label debut (
Vanishing Lands
) -- her only two albums under the alias
Dog in the Snow
before switching to her own name --
Helen Ganya
established an inventive combination of dream pop and more angular indie electronica as a setting for her introspective and observational songs. A U.K. native based in Brighton,
Ganya
grew up mostly in Singapore and spent her summers visiting her mother's side of the family in Thailand. Her anchor to Thailand, her grandmother, died in 2021. With her fourth album,
Share Your Care
,
not only reflects on those summers in Thailand but pays tribute to her grandmother, extended family, and her own identity with a shift in sound that adds a strong Thai music influence, including traditional Thai instruments, to her already high-contrast sound. In preparation for recording the album, she and her co-producer,
Rob Flynn
, visited Buddhapadipa Temple in Wimbledon, where they met
Artit Phonron
, who went on to play percussion and stringed instruments like ranat ek, saw duang, and khim on some tracks. Other contributors include
Chinnathip Poollap
on pi (Thai oboe) and
John "Rittipo" Moore
on woodwinds.
kicks off
with the Thai-suffused rock instrumental "Weera," a prologue with the attention-grabbing drama of a lights-lowering apron scene. She then delves into the celebratory, blurting art dance-rock of "Share Your Care," whose blown-out bass, pounding percussion, and layered flute-like accompaniment entwine Eastern and Western influences in a way that compels throughout the entire album. (The record's 13 tracks also include three short documentary-style audio clips of conversations and city noise.) Taken together,
is mostly danceable, consistently eccentric, and often at once biographical and fantastical, with
considering reincarnation on "Chaiyo!" and the afterlife on "Hell Money" amid personal, familial reflections. Also included is an appearance by British Nigerian experimental musician
Tony Njoku
, who plays
's late grandfather on "Myna," enabling a posthumous conversation between the two. ~ Marcy Donelson

















