Sunday (1994)

Sunday (1994) are back with “Devotion,” a hazy, emotionally rich centerpiece from their expanding sonic world, one that feels both intimate and cinematic in equal measure. Built from the creative partnership of Paige Turner and Lee Newell, the track captures the duo’s signature tension between romanticism and realism, where love, memory, and self-reflection blur into something beautifully unresolved. “Devotion” is a love letter scrawled on the back of a beer mat, about a night in an English pub where the ceilings sag, the ale is flat, and the heart, against all good sense, rises. Originally featured on the band’s EP of the same name and now included on the newly expanded deluxe edition via RCA Records, the track drifts in with a soft-focus glow, gauzy guitars, understated rhythms, and vocals that feel almost whispered, yet beneath that dreamlike surface lies something far more complex. It is a song about the weight of attachment, the quiet intensity of giving yourself to something (or someone) completely, even when it begins to unravel. That cinematic instinct runs through everything Sunday (1994) creates. Written and recorded in their one-bedroom apartment, their music carries a handmade intimacy that contrasts with its widescreen emotional scope. There is a sense of nostalgia throughout, echoes of ‘90s indie and melancholic pop, but it never feels derivative. Instead, they reshape those influences into something distinctly their own: dreamy, slightly surreal, and laced with a knowing sense of humor. Following a run of sold-out shows and major festival appearances, the band has quietly built a world that listeners want to step into and stay in. “Devotion” deepens that connection. Experience “Devotion” HERE.

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