8/10
There’s a quiet confidence running through 'Lavender' that makes it feel far more assured than most first releases. Across five understated but emotionally rich tracks, the young Gympie singer-songwriter Elke Louie turns memories of adolescence, first love, isolation and uncertainty into something intimate and emotive, creating an indie-folk collection that feels like the beginning of a long artistic journey already fully underway.
What immediately stands out is Louie’s ability to make restraint feel powerful. The arrangements breathe naturally, allowing her songwriting to sit at the centre of each song without unnecessary decoration. Acoustic guitars shimmer softly beneath her vocals, melodies unfold patiently, and emotions arrive gradually as it plays. It gives the EP an organic warmth that recalls the reflective storytelling of Big Thief or the quiet emotional pull of José González, while still feeling distinctly her own.
The title-track acts as the emotional centrepiece. Written during a songwriting retreat and intended as her first true love song, it carries a tenderness that never slips into sentimentality. There’s a feeling of stillness within the track, as though she is learning to trust vulnerability in real time.
Elsewhere, earlier singles 'Killing Time' and 'Sandman' reveal different shades of her songwriting. 'Killing Time' drifts with a kind of bruised introspection, capturing the confusion and emotional limbo that often accompanies early adulthood, while 'Sandman' feels brighter despite the unease lingering beneath its surface. Throughout the EP, she consistently balances emotional heaviness with softness, allowing melancholy to exist without overwhelming us.
The production work from Clare Quinn and Lawrence Menard gives the EP a gentle cohesion without sanding away its raw edges. Every instrument feels carefully placed and every pause intentional as the songs unfold like memories resurfacing slowly.
At a time when so much indie-folk leans heavily into aesthetic rather than substance, 'Lavender' succeeds because it feels emotionally honest above all else. Elke Louie trusts these songs, and more importantly, trusts the emotions inside them. And that instinct already feels like the mark of a songwriter worth following closely.