Orion Sun

Orion Sun

Thursday 6th March 2025

SJM presents

Orion Sun

7:00 pm until 10:00 pm

Tickets

Price: £22.66

Status: Sold Out (Updated on 20.09.24)


Read our guide to buying and using tickets.

Admission

Doors open at 7:00 PM – Event ends at 10:00 PM

Age: You must be 16 years of age or more to attend this event (no exceptions). | Photo ID – We require original physical (non-digital) photo ID and use ID scanning. Without ID we may refuse you entry. | | Access – Standing. There are no seats assigned. The venue is arranged on several floors with many stairs and no lift. Find out more about accessiblity.

About Orion Sun

Orion Sun is in love with the process. “I feel like my most shallow and my deepest self when I’m in the recording process, because I’m digging deep but to everyone in my life, that’s all I can talk about,” she laughs.” And so after two years in creation mode, it’s no surprise that she’s still coming to terms with what life looks like outside of the studio. “Not being there feels weird, I feel weird! But I went to a flea market today for the first time,” she says proudly.

The child of two artists, raised in South Jersey, now based in Los Angeles, Orion has cultivated a huge cult following with her singular lane of intoxicatingly intimate alt R&B and warmly analogue aesthetics. Featured on the opener of Fred Again’s latest album USB, having supported Daniel Caesar on his 2023 tour, been sampled by Bryson Tiller and amassing almost 5 million monthly listeners on Spotify, all as an independent artist, the 28-year-old is primed and giddy to release her self-titled album Orion. The name alone signifies the gradual build up to this moment, she explains. “[Orion] is a hunter and that mentality, you know, you need patience when you’re out there. You could be there for days. Waiting for that perfect sound, that perfect feeling.”

Following three critically acclaimed projects of her own in A Collection of Fleeting Moments and Daydreams (2017), Hold Space For Me (2020) and Getaway (2022), though Orion is not her debut, in many ways it feels like it. Sparked by a big, deep heartbreak (unlike the times she thought she was heartbroken before), Orion embarks on a journey of self-discovery, grief and growth. “It [was] time to get to know me again as an adult,” she says. And the result is a meditation on love in all of its raw, tangled beauty and ugliness too. “I just wanted to be as bare bones emotionally as I possibly could because I was curious about what was on the other side of that.” Citing the poem at the end of first single ‘Already Gone’ as a soul-baring moment she had to stand “ten toes down” on, even when it felt revealing. On the track, she laments ‘all my scars bleed, I feel weak and ugly.’ “I don’t feel that way now but the beautiful part of all this is that it’s all fleeting, even the good stuff. It’s kind of magic when you are able to push past those emotions and capture them because I listen back now and I’m like ‘we made it!’”

Upcoming single ‘Sweet’ sits at the opposite end of that spectrum, relishing in the addictive saccharine highs and crashes of living in delusion, with symptoms akin to a sugary binge. Self-produced front-to-back, it’s hypnotic and oozing – heady with the haze of ‘what if’s. “It follows Mary Jane on the record, and I wanted to put those two back to back because it’s the part of the album where I’m just falling into my vices,” she unpacks. “Imagining a world where you weren’t difficult, I wasn’t difficult, if it actually went well. Equating that mindless delusional vibe to overdosing on all the sweets, mukbang style.” ‘Take My Eyes’ is a mournful yet hopeful respite, stripped back to just pure vocals and patient chords before strings eventually soar. “I thought it was really important to have a moment of stillness sonically on the record because that was the only thing that really saved me in terms of, not only moving on but being open to love again in all of the ways,” Orion says. The ask on this one is simple, to show her what you see through your eyes one last time. To be grateful for the smallest moments with someone, like birdwatching or a passing breeze or gazing at the stars, that we only view from the past.


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