Emma Swift – Resurrection Game: Emma Swift’s new album, The Resurrection Game, is an intimate journey through heartbreak, reflection, and renewal. Moving gracefully between confession, philosophy, and poetic storytelling, the record feels like both a personal diary and a universal meditation on survival. Born out of a deeply challenging time that left her broken and searching for meaning, Swift has turned crisis into a song cycle that resonates with vulnerability, resilience, and quiet strength.
With tracks like How To Be Small, she bridges the traditions of folk songwriting with the raw openness of confessional poetry. Her words cut with clarity and honesty, yet her warm, dusky vocals soften every blow, carrying the listener through an experience that is both deeply personal and profoundly relatable. The lush, baroque-inspired arrangements add an almost cinematic sweep, balancing sorrow with grace.
“I am a big believer in the redemptive power of art,” Swift shares. “Though many of these songs come from an immensely difficult time in my life, what I’m trying to do here is to alchemize the experience. To make the brutal become beautiful.”
The Resurrection Game marks her first full-length release of entirely original material and serves as the long-awaited follow-up to 2020’s Blonde On The Tracks, the acclaimed collection where she reimagined eight Bob Dylan classics through her own lens. This new record, however, stands as her boldest statement yet—a testament to her ability to transform grief into something luminous.

Released via her own Tiny Ghost Records, the album is available in a wide range of formats: digital, CD, cassette, premium D2 black vinyl, and special limited editions including lavender and blue swirl vinyl. Each vinyl pressing, created at Denver’s Paramount Pressing, comes with deluxe packaging, a gatefold sleeve, and rice paper inner bag—making The Resurrection Game as much a work of art to hold as it is to hear.
This is not just an album. It is Emma Swift finding beauty in the wreckage, and in doing so, reminding us that art can heal, transform, and resurrect.
Emma Swift – Resurrection Game
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