Manchester-based poet, writer, and producer
Antony Szmierek today releases his highly anticipated debut album
Service Station At The End Of The Universe, already earning critical acclaim with
Dork and
DIY awarding it glowing 5-star reviews.
Featuring the singles ‘
The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Fallacy’, ‘
The Great Pyramid of Stockport’, ‘
Yoga Teacher’, and ‘
Angie’s Wedding’, the album is a bold fusion of dancefloor euphoria and introspective storytelling. Co-produced by Szmierek and his long-time collaborators
Robin Parker, Max Rad, Louie Fulford-Smith and fresh Mancunian talent
Yves Jones, Service Station At The End Of The Universe is a perfectly packaged collection of deep dancefloor poetry, with moments of downbeat, dark poignance.
Also on the album is focus track ‘
Take Me There’, fulfilling the album’s promise of one last euphoria soaked party. Antony explains, “Admissions of love, loneliness and fears of burning the candle at both ends come to light as our protagonists leave their pretences at the door and give in to the music for what feels like the final time. If you can’t take me there, then nobody can.”
Each of the singles from Service Station At The End Of The Universe have been added to
BBC 6 Music’s playlist, as well as receiving significant support from
BBC Radio 1 and
BBC Radio 2. This past Monday, he performed live on
Radio 1 for
Sian Eleri’s Future Flex. He’ll be sitting down with
Matt Wilkinson for his
Apple Music show next week, as well as performing live from
Maida Vale for
Jo Whiley’s Radio 2 show later in March.. Elsewhere, Antony is currently gracing the cover of Dork magazine (as well as being in their Hype List), was named an
Observer Ones To Watch, has been announced on the line up for
Reading & Leeds Festivals, featured in
NME’s Most Anticipated Albums of 2025 and sees his profile grow across Europe with lots of support from radio stations across the continent, including a playlist addition from Germany’s
Flux FM.
The past few years have been a wild ride for the artist. Cutting his teeth on the Manchester spoken word scene and gaining notoriety for his seamless flow skewering everything from the hardships of contemporary British life to finding the unexpected beauty in the everyday, it was the 2023 release of his single ‘The Hitchhiker’s Guide To The Fallacy’ that kicked off his meteoric ascent. Set against the backdrop of a pounding kick drum and club-ready synths, Szmierek lets loose a stream of consciousness that lays out his vision of musical vulnerability and communal escapism: “Everything’s ironic now, post-post-punk. Take me away” he says on the track.
The earworming record soon found its way onto the BBC 6 Music airwaves and led Szmierek to be named an
Artist of the Year 2023 by the station. There followed appearances on
Later... with Jools Holland, a
BBC Radio 1 Maida Vale session, multiple triumphant
Glastonbury sets and a flurry of comparisons: to the pavement prose of The Streets, the poetry of John Cooper Clarke if he found himself at the Haçienda, or like Jarvis Cocker for the UK Garage generation. Yet, with the release of his 2023 indie-influenced
EP Poems To Dance To and now his banger-filled, dancefloor-focused debut album, Service Station at the End of the Universe, Szmierek cements his sound as one that is distinctly his own.
***
“Antony Szmierek’s luminous spoken word finds relief in vulnerability of all kinds: the ephemerality of home; surrendering to the moment; love, loss and the mysteries in between. In his songs, they swirl together like sediment in a wine glass. It’s an approach that could easily turn mawkish, but his forthcoming debut album, Service Station at the End of the Universe, proves he has a deft touch.”
Observer “One To Watch”
“What makes ‘Service Station...’ so special is how it balances its narrative framework with genuine heart as Szmierek examines how we find meaning in the spaces between destinations”
DORK ***
“Fundamentally British yet beautifully universal”
DIY *****
“Manchester has an exciting new voice”
Record Collector ****
Eileen Carpio