Taste Test: The Hollow Ends struck by nature, beauty & morality on new song, ‘Annie Pardami’

The folk singer-songwriter cleans out the brush of morality and accountability.

Welcome to Taste Test, a song/video review series of SubmitHub-only gemstones

Winding beneath the creaking boughs of a thick overhang, and working his way upon a rickety old bridge, folk singer-songwriter Zachary Schwartz, who fronts the collective named The Hollow Ends, found himself struck by nature’s beauty and the duality of morality and growing older. The song “Annie Pardami” skips through the forest, as he wrangles his own personal journey through life’s crunchy buildup. “Is there any part of me I can control anymore?!” he sings. Schwartz internalizes both accountability in the world and what it means to reconcile his inclinations.  It smartly configures his vocal and emotional swings as counterintuitive to the production’s bluegrass toe-tapping. In effect, the listener probes their own place in such an existence, too.

“Annie Pardami” opens the band’s new release, The EP II, out everywhere now.

Listen below:

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