Alexander Wolfe unveils the cinematic video for his latest single "To Feel Love" - taken from his upcoming album 'Everythinglessness' out 16th January
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New Album ‘Everythinglessness’, out January 16th, 2026
“How am I meant to accept the fact that the thing most likely to kill me in this world is me?”
— Alexander Wolfe, 2025
Following the release of his emotionally charged new single “To Feel Love”, acclaimed London-born artist Alexander Wolfe now unveils the accompanying music video, delivering a spontaneous, seat-of-the-pants production shot in just 24 hours, and directed by regular collaborator Joe Dixon.
Set in Wolfe’s actual living room and featuring a cast of real-life friends, the video captures the spirit of the track with visceral honesty. “Those are my real mates and that is my actual living room” Wolfe explains. “Maybe because of my ADHD, I really thrive on these spontaneous bursts of creativity and this was definitely one of those. This is one of my favourite videos I’ve ever made, I think. Don’t do drugs kids. Smoking kills etc.”
The video plays like a frayed home movie from a night that started off hopeful and descended into chaos, echoing the themes of the song itself. As Wolfe’s character stares vacantly into a crowded room, we see the manic highs and quiet lows of seeking connection in all the wrong places.
Written after a period of intense personal reckoning, including time spent in a mental health rehab facility in 2023, his new album ‘Everythinglessness’ is Wolfe’s most emotionally resonant work to date, an album that unpacks what it means to be a man in a society that often demands silence and stoicism instead of softness and support.
Wolfe explains: “There’s a crisis around masculinity at the moment, you see it played out by grifters like Andrew Tate and Tommy Robinson. I believe the way through isn’t by hardening, but softening. We need more examples of soft, strong men.”
Wolfe’s voice channels the emotional resonance of Guy Garvey and Nick Cave, while his songwriting explores everything from grief and generational trauma to love, loss and survival.
This new album cycle began with “Talk”, a stirring single released earlier this year that wrestled with the harrowing fact that suicide is the leading cause of death for men under 50 in the UK. Described as a “call to arms for lads to open up”, the track received widespread praise for its emotive weight and Wolfe’s rare ability to transform anguish into art.
“Just talk. To each other, to therapists, to the old lady on the bus. We have to break the shame. We need to stop seeing vulnerability as weakness.” — Alexander Wolfe
Followed by the AA side singles “The Toughening”, a reflection of a young boy wrestling with his father’s rigid ideals, “man up, don’t show weakness”, and “The Softening” which offers resolution and healing, where the protagonist redefines strength on his own terms. As Wolfe says, “They’re bookends. Two sides of the same coin. It’s about becoming the kind of man you choose to be — not the one you’re told to be.”
Raised in 1990s Woolwich, Wolfe has always been a chronicler of modern British life, blending observational grit with emotional depth. His ability to turn personal trauma into musical therapy has made him a cult favourite among those drawn to raw, unvarnished storytelling.
On ‘Everythinglessness’, Wolfe blends analogue textures, layered harmonies, and stark piano lines into a record that is as cinematic as it is intimate. Each track feels like a chapter in a coming-of-age story, delivering a journey through boyhood, masculinity, mental illness, grief, and ultimately, acceptance.
From the premature death of a parent to the slow unravelling of a relationship, Wolfe’s work carries us through the heavy moments that often go unspoken; particularly for young men. But in that silence, Wolfe has found a voice. One that does not shout, but speaks with clarity, empathy and truth.
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