Rushmere

Album: Rushmere (2025)
Charted: 83
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Songfacts®:

  • Rushmere is not, as you might imagine, a quaint English village where octogenarians gather to discuss the merits of various tea cozies, but a pond in Wimbledon Common in southwest London. It was here, amid the gentle lapping of pond water, that Marcus Mumford, Ben Lovett, and Ted Dwane first conceived the idea of forming a band. And thus, Mumford & Sons was born.
  • The song is a rousing ode to nostalgia, self-discovery, and the inexorable passage of time. It also serves as something of a love letter to the band's roots, with its acoustic instrumentation, banjo-plucking, kick-drum-stomping rhythm, and anthemic chorus. If that list sounds like a recipe for vintage Mumford & Sons, that's because it is. After dabbling in alternative and electronic sounds over the previous decade, "Rushmere" finds them pivoting back to their folky beginnings.
  • Mumford & Sons co-wrote "Rushmere" with the industry juggernaut Greg Kurstin and Nashville's storytelling queen, Natalie Hemby. Kurstin, a genre-hopping producer who has worked with the likes of Liam Gallagher, Foo Fighters, and Gorillaz, brought his polished pop sensibilities to the table. Hemby, whose songwriting credits include Little Big Town's "Pontoon" and Lady A's "Downtown," added her country storytelling prowess to the mix.
  • The band shared production responsibilities with Dave Cobb, the producer of albums for the likes of Brandi Carlile, Chris Stapleton and Slash.
  • Rushmere is Mumford & Sons' first album as a trio. Banjoist Winston Marshall left the band in 2021 after sparking controversy by endorsing a book by right-wing journalist Andy Ngo, an incident that set the internet ablaze and ultimately led to his departure.
  • The recording process for Rushmere took the band on a cross-continental journey, with sessions held at Cobb's RCA Studio A in Nashville, a studio in Savannah, Georgia, and Marcus Mumford's own setup in the English countryside of Devon.
  • Rushmere topped the UK albums chart. It was Mumford & Sons' third #1 following 2012's Babel and 2015's Wilder Mind.
  • Marcus Mumford hit a creative wall while trying to write the lyrics for the title track of Rushmere - so much so that his wife, actor Carey Mulligan, stepped in with a solution.

    "She kicked me out of the house," Mumford admitted on the Zach Sang Show podcast. "She was like, 'You're driving yourself - and me - insane. You need to get out and be an artist somewhere else for a few days.'"

    Taking her advice, Mumford flew to Istanbul. "I sat in a café for three days, drank coffee, smoked cigars, and wrote poetry like a prick," he joked.

    The change of scenery worked - soon after, the lyrics to "Rushmere" finally came together.

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