Quote:
I’m studying again. I’m slowly moving towards what would be my next book. It’s so gargantuan at the moment. I couldn’t even possibly tell you what it is, but I’m having to do a lot of study and I’m enjoying that. It is very unwieldy right now, and that’s usually the process. You start off with aiming in such a wide field, you’re never sure where it’s going to end up. And slowly it’ll start taking me somewhere, which will come a more refined path.
—Vanity Fair, 1 Mar 2024
Quote:
I’m starting down the road of my next project, and [John Parish]’s very involved in it. I talk to him about it all the time.
…
For the next project, I’d probably keep songs quite separate to poems. A song is a song, and a poem is a poem; I’m not going to try and set poems to music.
…
Do you think the poems and songs will be related to one another in your next project?
I think the theme will be.
—Rolling Stone, 18 Sep 2024
Quote:
I look forward to the year ahead and continuing work on my next project.
—
A Colour Field playlist posted to pjharvey.net, 31 Dec 2024
Quote:
I’ve actually already started writing songs for a new album and I’ve started working on a new piece of poetry. So right now, I’m excited about the new world I’m shaping little by little.
—Rolling Stone Japan, 2 Feb 2025
So now that the
Orlam and
I Inside the Old Year Dying era is done, and we know she isn’t retiring or fully rebranding as a theatrical composer or poet… should the speculation about PJHLP11 begin?
I’ve been thinking about the recent influences she was listing in interviews last year—re-reading T.S. Eliot’s
Four Quartets, dipping in and out of
The Book of Job, Kali Malone’s mournful drones of
All Life Long, Rainer Maria Rilke’s
Duino Elegies… will death and loss be the focal point of the next body of work? Or is it just Polly’s regular gloomy art diet and I’m just reading into this too much?