Noah Kahan has partnered with Netflix for a brand new documentary titled Out Of Body.
Following the recent announcement of his fourth studio album, The Great Divide, arriving April 24, the 29 year old singer songwriter has now revealed he is also releasing a film with the streaming platform.
The intimate documentary captures the artist at a pivotal turning point in his career after the overwhelming success of his 2022 breakout single Stick Season.
The official synopsis states: “After a whirlwind year of sold-out tours and unprecedented acclaim, he returns to his Vermont roots and family.
“Buoyed by his uncanny wit, he searches for a sense of home and creative inspiration as he confronts the deeply personal struggles that have left him out of sync with himself.”
Filmmaker Nick Sweeney praised Noah for being open about what he described as a “strange in-between moment” in his life.
He said: "When we started filming, I had no idea what we’d capture, only that Noah was determined to be honest about everything, especially the messy bits.
“He was in a strange in-between moment, caught in the collision between almost surreal fame and a quieter inner world he’d tried to keep offstage. What we captured over the course of a year surprised me – moments that were thrilling, terrifying, [and] hilarious, often all at once.”
Noah also recently reflected on the inspiration behind his upcoming LP in a heartfelt Instagram post: "From a long silence forms a divide, a great expanse demanding attention. I stare across it. I see old friends, my father, my mother, my siblings, my younger self, the great state of Vermont.
"I want to scream these feelings, to gesticulate wildly at the figures on the other side, but my voice has grown hoarse and muted after years of climbing a ladder towards the wild, spiralling dreams that have materialised in front of me."
The folk pop artist continued: "Instead, I wrote them down next to a piano in Nashville, next to a pond in Guilford, Vermont, in a legendary studio in upstate New York, on a farm with a firetower in Only, Tennessee.
"The songs are the words I would say if I could. They are the fears I dance with in the moments before I drift off to sleep. The music here is my best attempt to delve deeper into the people, places, and feelings that have made me who I am. I am grateful for all of it, for all of you, for listening to them, if you choose to do so."
His 2022 album Stick Season and its title track became a defining moment in his career, and last year he shared that he does not take offense when people describe his music as a “snooze fest.”
He joked online that he actually considers it a “compliment,” adding that attending a real life “snoozing festival” sounds like a relaxing and enjoyable experience.
Noah wrote on his Instagram Story: "When people call my music a snooze fest I take it as a compliment because to me going to an actual snoozing festival sounds fun and restful."

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