Nick & June Return to the Past With Reflective Single "2017"
There's something about certain years that stay with you, refusing to let go even when you've moved forward. For Berlin-based duo Nick & June, 2017 is one of those years, and their latest single explores that specific kind of backwards pull.
The track, also called "2017," features The Antlers frontman Peter Silberman and arrives ahead of the duo's upcoming album New Year's Face. It's accompanied by a music video that leans into the nostalgic theme, built from old performance footage shot on a camcorder. The grainy, vintage quality isn't just aesthetic, it's the whole point.
"It's good to occasionally ask yourself why your mind keeps wandering back to the past," says Suzie Lou Kraft, one half of Nick & June. "Who's still living in 2017?"
For Nick Wolf, collaborating with Silberman felt like a full-circle moment. "Ever since I discovered The Antlers' album Hospice back in 2009, I've been a huge fan of Peter and the band," Wolf explains. "To me, he's one of the best songwriters of his generation. That we'd end up recording songs together...it still feels kind of crazy to me."
The collaboration makes sense when you hear "2017." It's a hypnotic track that doesn't rush anywhere, unfolding with a gentle melody and the duo's signature paper-thin vocals. There's no urgency here, just the slow drift of memory. It feels like what it's describing: the strange stillness of looking back at time that's already passed.
What's interesting is how different "2017" sounds compared to the other singles from New Year's Face. Both "Husband & Wife" featuring Owen Pallett and "Anthem" carry obvious anger, but this track takes a quieter approach. It's more meditation than confrontation.
The context adds another layer. Kraft and Wolf broke up but kept making music together, which explains the emotional complexity running through these songs. "2017" doesn't pick sides or assign blame. It just sits with the feeling of being stuck somewhere you can't return to.
You can follow Nick & June on Instagram and TikTok for updates on New Year's Face.
Sometimes the hardest part isn't moving forward, it's figuring out why part of you keeps glancing back. "2017" doesn't answer that question, but it understands it perfectly.


