The 17-year-old California songwriter and producer puts a formal frame around years of self-recorded output, offering six tracks that move between folk intimacy and electronic texture.
Eilish Constance has always worked fast and kept things close. She put out two albums on her own at 14, then a steady string of singles that blurred indie, pop, and electronica without settling into any single lane. Now 17, she’s announcing her debut EP Singing for fun, out June 5, 2026, and releasing the new track “Hold my hand hunter” alongside it.
The six-song record arrives as a self-release, collecting earlier cuts like “Superstar,” “BB gun,” and “Chew and swallow” together with newer material. The single gives a clear view of her instincts: folk-rooted songwriting that refuses to stay put, built with the same hands-on approach she’s used since her early Bandcamp days.
Constance has already worked with producer apob, toured with Acopia, and dropped collaborative moments like “bow&curtsy” with Dylan Thom. But the EP feels like she’s deliberately drawing a line under that prolific sprawl. It’s a tight set, scaled down and self-contained, the kind of project that makes earlier experiments look less like detours and more like deliberate steps.
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