My Heart Has Been Broken By One Unfit To Name

My Heart Has Been Broken 

By One Unfit To Name

A 2 track EP available as a limited edition lathe cut or a digital download.



My Heart Has Been Broken By One Unfit To Name
Horror Horror


Also available on all streaming platforms, We recording artists put our heart and soul, sweat and tears into making our music available and so I encourage you to support my music if you like what you hear so I can keep making more! With love and gratitude.

Music I was asked to create for a UK indie film, Where the Dogs Divide Her.

In celebration of Halloween 2013, I released a new single My Heart Has Been Broken By One Unfit To Name, from a soon to be released 8-inch. In spring 2017 it is relaunching to celebrate the new limited edition lathe cut release! 


See the Lynchian inspired video with scenes from the Lynchian inspired independent UK film, Where the Dogs Divide here: https://youtu.be/yPPHrRHWc88.  I was asked to create the song based on a poem the film maker wrote for a specific scene. 


When I was a teen, I would creep down the stairs once my family was asleep, and under dim light I would quietly play improvisational spooky mood music on my mom's synthesizer. I was most drawn to making up somber creepy toned sounds and circus ditties on keyboards. It's just always been this way since my Great Grandma Jones gave me her 1940s Italian chord organ.

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If you like what you see and hear, my merch is for sale via my Bandcamp page here: https://christineleakey.bandcamp.com



“David Lynch didn't direct this video for Christine Leakey, but you'd never know it...”
Alan Cross (Toronto) - Alan Cross: professional music geek
“... When David Lynch began releasing records recently, you may have expected them to sound more like this than the unexpected styles he produced. The music here is stark, intensely atmospheric and, importantly, quite cinematic without being over the top. In fact you could say the opposite is true; this track is actually very understated. It's slow, it's deceivingly complex, it's impeccably produced and the vocals are haunting, but they're positioned back a little in the mix, so as not to take the spotlight away from the song as a whole. The idea after all, was to create a soundscape to accompany a bleak poem that speaks of the devil, funeral fires, deadly fevers and fading to dust, so taking the focus somewhere else would be unfaithful to the whole notion. It takes a steady pair of hands to sail a musical ship like this, and many would get it wrong. So although we're still left waiting to hear if there will be a possibly different direction for Christine Leakey in the future, this stunning, reverberating piece will satisfy any cravings for now.”
Sound of Confusion - Scilly Island, England
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