Ecosphere isn’t just a title—it’s how this album breathes. New Fossils locked themselves away in the Hungarian mountains and came back with a record that works like nature itself: messy, balanced, alive.
This is the band’s third album and their biggest leap yet. Out with the polished jazz, in with synths, electric bass, dirty grooves, and percussion that hits like a storm. Each member brought their own tunes, and somehow it all clicked—like throwing wild ingredients into a pot and getting a perfect stew.
They pulled in Emma Nagy’s haunting vocals and Áron Horváth’s cimbalom sorcery for that special Eastern European ache. The result? A moody, mystical, genre-hopping trip that’s as grounded as it is spiritual.
The cover art by József Csató nails it—colors bleeding into each other, just like the music. Ecosphere is one big, breathing organism of sound: part chaos, part harmony, all heart.