Following a forced hiatus from music, Au/Ra channels fantasy and self-reckoning into her first full-length project, out next week.
Three years without releasing music can feel like an eternity for an artist who found viral success in her teens. For Au/Ra—born Jamie Lou Stenzel—that silence wasn’t chosen. Legal disputes stripped away her ability to put out songs, forcing a reckoning with identity beyond the stage name that had defined her since “Panic Room” broke out when she was 16.
Now 23, Au/Ra returns with heartcore, her debut album and a deliberate act of imaginative reconstruction. The project is built as a fantasy autobiography: the character Au/Ra navigates a dungeon of the mind after her heartcore has been taken. The lore extends beyond the music into a companion comic book, conceived and executed in a locked-in two-and-a-half-month sprint.
The alt-pop singer, a longtime Lord of the Rings fan-fiction writer, treats world-building as a central creative tool. The album’s escapist architecture isn’t a retreat from reality but a parallel to the personal uncertainty she lived through. “It’s been a very internal world for me,” she told CLASH, describing the months of intense focus that shaped the record. The result aims to convert hardship into structured, playable mythology—less a collection of songs than a cohesive narrative universe.
heartcore arrives next week, marking the end of a long limbo and the beginning of a more self-directed chapter.
Join the Club
Like this story? You’ll love our monthly newsletter.
Thank you for subscribing to the newsletter.
Oops. Something went wrong. Please try again later.






