Rising 20-year-old singer-songwriter SEREN today releases her new single ‘Something True’, taken from forthcoming EP Love At The End Of The World – out September 11th.

Beginning as a rolling piano confessional before blossoming into a soaring, emotionally charged crescendo, ‘Something True’ showcases SEREN’s gift for pairing intimate storytelling with cinematic scale. Produced by Tobie Tripp (Bellah Mae, Victoria Canal, Matilda Mann), and anchored by the striking lyric, “all the times I said I hate you / that’s when I needed you most”, the track captures a moment of emotional breakthrough — an acceptance of vulnerability and a determination to express love openly to the people who matter most – listen here

Having graduated from the BRIT School, SEREN is quietly becoming a force to be reckoned with. She began the year with a series of standout live performances, including BBC Introducing’s Abbie McCarthy Instant Karma event, alongside high-profile support slots for Mulaa Joans and Only The Poets at O2 Academy Brixton.

Last year saw the release of her stunning debut EP Where The Heart Is, a deeply personal collection reflecting on her upbringing in Stroud. Featuring tracks including ‘Maybe I Don’t Know’ and ‘River’, the project earned early support from The Forty Five, Ones To Watch, Spindle Magazine and more, establishing SEREN as an exciting talent.

Her forthcoming new EP, Love At The End Of The World, will arrive on August 7th and is a candid exploration of love, youth and connection set against a backdrop of existential unease. Where her debut examined belonging and identity, this new chapter asks what it means to build something lasting when everything else feels fragile.

SEREN possesses a quiet yet undeniable power, using her music to explore life’s biggest questions with striking honesty. Disarming in its candour, her music threads together Joni Mitchell-esque folk storytelling, with songwriting that serves as a way of understanding both herself and the world around her. While Where The Heart Is looked back on the people and places that shaped her identity, her new music turns its gaze firmly towards an uncertain future.

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