THE All’S EYE Break Through With Gritty Genre Defying New Single “Carriage House”
- Miles Coleman

- Jul 7
- 2 min read
Updated: Jul 9

Emerging from the crossroads of soul, funk, and exploratory jazz, The All’s Eye has unleashed a new instrumental track, “Carriage House,” released June 26, 2025. Tracked live at the legendary Carriage House Studios in Stamford, Connecticut, the single captures the trio’s raw energy and unmistakable chemistry. It is a bold analog soaked statement that speaks to both the past and the future of groove driven music.
Led by guitarist and composer Ari Joshua, alongside drummer Ben Atkind and keyboardist Kris Yunker, “Carriage House” is a simmering cocktail of sonic textures. Gritty guitar tones, propelled by warm overdrive and razor sharp precision, weave seamlessly with Yunker’s Hammond organ and clavinet lines, while Atkind’s drums anchor the mix with subtle jazz nuance and a pulsing almost tribal urgency. The result is a tightly coiled soul funk burner that never sits still, alive with dynamic interplay and spontaneous edge.
Despite its instrumental form, the track has a deep vocal soul to it. Phrasing, rhythm, and melody all carry a lyrical sensibility that suggests a forthcoming vocal version, teased in harmonized tones that briefly rise through the mix. Still, it is the live chemistry of the trio that remains the star here. “Carriage House” does not just sound recorded, it feels captured, like a moment caught mid burst, spontaneous yet refined, with layers that reward repeated listening.
The single arrived just as The All’s Eye launched their Pacific Northwest summer tour, which wrapped on July 2 with a packed show in Portland. Over six nights, the band brought the track to life onstage, deepening its groove and showcasing the full force of their improvisational prowess. With that tour now in the books, the trio has cemented their reputation as a must see live act whose recorded work only scratches the surface of their creative firepower.
Behind the boards, Mclee Mathais handles engineering duties with clarity and warmth, Jakael Tristram sculpts the mix with cinematic space and force, and Joe Lambert puts the final polish on the master. Together they elevate a track that is already bursting with character, giving it room to breathe and punch to soar.






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