Introducing: Sons of Sevilla // share new double single “Forever Heaven” / “Changing”

April 15 2026

“Forever Heaven” / “Changing” is out now, listen to it here.

Today, Sons of Sevilla – the musical partnership of brothers Henry and Reuben Vaun Smith whose vibrant sound basks in a warm, thickset, and lightly psychedelic nature – release the double single “Forever Heaven” / “Changing” via Ubiquity Records. Recorded with producer Max Shrager (The Shacks, Say She She), the singles are musically rich, sonically vivid, terrifically tactile, and as emotionally stirring as they are infectious.

Listen to “Forever Heaven” / “Changing” here.

“Forever Heaven” sees the pair at their sweet and alluring best, with glassy-eyed, loved-up lead vocals, chiming melodies and dusty licks rising above rubbery bass guitar, warming electric piano motifs, and a snare-heavy soul break. It’s a moon-lit masterpiece tailored for humid evenings and sweltering summer nights.

This blue-eyed soul-meets-soft-rock feel is further explored on “Changing,” where the Smith brothers offer subtle nods to pedal steel-sporting Americana and late sixties psychedelic dream pop, creating a track more languid, gentle, and musically detailed in tone.

Born via an impromptu brotherly recording session in their original home of Featherstone, West Yorkshire – a former coal-mining village in the North of England – and named in honor of a city they visited many times on family holidays in their youth, Sons of Sevilla have received plenty of plaudits since making their debut on Ubiquity Records in early 2024, a label that has also championed Reuben Vaun Smith’s similarly acclaimed solo work.

To date, they have released two fine full-length excursions, 2024’s Lullabies For a Wildcat and last year’s speedy sequel, Street Light Moon, and extensively toured the UK, Europe, and United States with their expanded band line-up.

2026 is set to be a big year for Sons of Sevilla, one that expands on the siblings’ sun-soaked signature sound while emphasizing the timeless warmth and color that has long been inherent in their joint productions.