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Rozi Leyden, known by her stage name Rozi Plain is a singer-songwriter originally from Winchester, England. Having moved to Bristol, she is known for working with other Bristol artists such as This Is The Kit and Rachael Dadd. To date she has released 2 solo albums on King Creosote's Fence Records with her latest album Joined Sometimes Unjoined set to get a wider release in October 2012.

Originally hailing from southern England’s secret garden of Winchester, Rozi moved base up to Bristol to form the Cleaner Collective with her brother Romanhead, and best pal Rachael Dadd. Exchanging demo tapes with Fence Records’ King Creosote and The Pictish Trail at the Green Man Festival, Rozi and her friends soon found themselves entwined in the world of DIY lo-fi folk merchants, the Fence Collective – regularly performing at the label’s legendary Home Game and Away Game events in Scotland, and playing genial host to any Fence performers travelling south. Debut album, Inside Over Here, introduced the listener to Rozi’s unique, ethereal songwriting style – fractured dreams about shark attacks, near-miss romances and slow motion conversations. It’s lighthearted modesty was championed by Devendra Banhart, and the album saw Rozi tour across the UK, mainland Europe, America and Japan – winning new fans supporting Devendra, Beach House, James Yorkston, KT Tunstall and François & The Atlas Mountains amongst others. As word of the album spread out, BBC’s Lauren Laverne, Marc Riley, Huw Stephens, Gideon Coe, Vic Galloway, Steve Lamacq and Rob Da Bank all became immediate fans – playing Rozi’s music, and inviting her up for sessions. New album, Joined Sometimes Unjoined, is Rozi’s second LP with Fence Records, following a move to Brixton, and the release of two interim EP’s with NeedNoWater – Humans and See My Boat. Accompanied by a full band this time, her sparse vocal and finger-picked guitar arrangements are fleshed out across ten tracks with a revolving cast of layered voices, soft-tumbling percussion, steel-pan drums, violin, piano and lilting brass. It’s a warm, summer-sun blend of melody centred around Rozi’s voice, and as such the playful jolt of lead-single, Humans, balances with the heart-breaking solemn vocal of Days Minutes; equally the carefree birdsong whistle of Eating In Your House is matched by the happy-golucky yelp of See My Boat.