Bristol-based band The Ramona Flowers return with the release of their fourth album, Made By Humans. The album is out now, including the focus track Mirrors In The Mansion and is available to stream and buy here.

Made By Humans is 13 slick tracks that seamlessly blends genres disco, funk and indie, featuring previously released singles Up All Night, California, Human, That Summer as well as unheard tracks including the emotive Sins Of The Father and synth-filled Circles. Without the boundaries of one genre, the album is their most creative and honest to date.

Speaking about the newly released album the band said, “Made by Humans is an album that dives deep into the raw, unfiltered emotions that define us-love, heartbreak, addiction, and everything in between. It’s a reminder that, in an age of artificial perfection, these songs are crafted from real experiences, real pain, and real passion- things only humans can truly feel. It’s a soundtrack to the highs and lows of being alive, exploring the connections we make, the ones we lose, and the vices we turn to in between.”

To celebrate the release, the band will be playing a free intimate acoustic live show, along with a signing on 14th October at Rough Trade in London’s iconic Denmark Street. Tickets are available through the link here. Having spent the majority of the last year playing internationally, including tours with Bad Suns, little image, Supergrass and Noel Gallaghers’ High Flying Birds, the show will see their live return to the UK.

Made By Humans has already seen great success through the singles, with Human climbing up the US Alt Radio charts and hitting over 1 million global streams, and track Dangerous hit the Top 30 at US Alt Radio. Hit single Up All Night has reached 1.9 million streams on Spotify and over 4 million global streams, and is the band’s biggest radio hit with over 100k plays at US Radio with 10k plays a week. Up All Night has hit the top 25 on Alt US Radio, entered the Billboard Chart earlier this year and was included in the NBA 2K24, which has now sold over 135 million copies.

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