Sing for You Double Single Art

News | Sing for You (Double Single)

Release Date: 7 April 2025 | Published Date: 7 April 2025

Sing for You Double Single Cover Art Sticker

“Sing for You”—the new single from Greg Williams’ acclaimed ‘Stone On Stone”—leads the album like The Verve channelling mid-70s Pink Floyd.

“An unexpected burst of Dave Gilmour-styled guitar leading to a mid tempo groove. Lush harmonies and unexpected twists make the chorus a real treat.”—Rob Morgan, A Goldfish Called Regret.

Ashley Naylor’s soaring Pink Floyd-esque lead guitar, Shane Reilly’s etherial pedal steel and James Black’s sinuous organ combine for five-minutes of psychedelic treats and swirling pop hooks.

The new double single, released on 7/4/25, comes with an unreleased acoustic demo of the song. A suitably psychedelic animated music video has just been awarded a Badge of Honour from the prestigious Berlin Music Video Awards 2025. Watch now…

“Stone On Stone”, released late last year, gathered local and international airplay and featured in multiple best albums of 2024 and end-of-year favourites lists.

The record is the first solo album this century by Greg Williams, the singer-songwriter behind The Young Homebuyers, Play Loud, The Everys and Splurge.

The new album takes the timeless songwriting craft of Crowded House, The Go-Betweens and Oasis, and blends all that with a love letter to the raw sound of classic Australian rock music, featuring Ashley Naylor (Paul Kelly, The Church, The Stems, Even) and cemented by the punchy production of Kevin Shirley (Divinyls, Hoodoo Gurus, Silverchair, Cold Chisel).

Greg has released a dozen albums on major and independent labels and toured nationally, his catalogue spanning garage pop, folk pop, lo-fi singer-songwriter and Brit-pop flavoured indie rock.

MOJO magazine heard the ghost of Lennon in his expressive and emotionally direct voice, keen eye for pop treats and innate ability to meld melody and mood, while others heard echoes of Neil Finn, Grant McLennon and “Liam from Oasis with a brain”.

Reviewers in the USA and UK dug deeper… Beatle-esque, “The Bends” era Radiohead, classic early Oasis, The Church and Teenage Fanclub.