Welsh-born, Sheffield-based singer songwriter Kat Eaton unveils her spellbinding third album ‘What Happens Now’, a journey through warm, groove-rich soul, jazz & pop that explores themes of resilience and renewal with lyrical depth, vintage instrumentation and timeless emotional resonance.
ARTIST: Kat Eaton
TITLE: What Happens Now
LABEL: Reason & Rhyme
RELEASE DATE: May 29th 2026
FORMAT: LP / CD / Digital
CATALOG N.: RRR03
GENRE: soul-jazz / r&b
Welsh born, Sheffield-based artist Kat Eaton reveals her third album What Happens Now, a spellbinding mix of soul, jazz, and timeless pop that captures her signature blend of warmth, groove, and lyrical depth. The album follows 2023’s Honestly and her breakout debut from 2021 Talk To Me, cementing Eaton as one of the UK’s most exciting soul artists.
Produced by long‑time collaborator Nick Atkinson, What Happens Now is a deeply human record about transition, resilience, and renewal. Having worked together since they were sixteen, Kat and Nick’s creative chemistry gives the album a rare coherence — equal parts vulnerability and confidence.
The pair recorded much of the album at their own Reason & Rhyme Studios in Sheffield, but key sessions took place at the legendary Konk Studios in London — founded by The Kinks and later used by Adele, Massive Attack, and The Bee Gees. Surrounded by vintage instruments, from classic Wurlitzers to analogue synths and retro microphones, they crafted a sound that feels both nostalgic and fresh. “Being at Konk really influenced how we approached performance and tone — every instrument had a story”, says Kat. The album was mixed by two‑time GRAMMY‑nominated engineer James Campbell and mastered by Christian Wright at Abbey Road Studios.
Musically, the record traverses classic and modern soul with jazz‑tinged sophistication — think Carole King, Stevie Wonder, and Allen Stone, filtered through Kat’s own sharp, British songwriting perspective. Atkinson’s production foregrounds organic instrumentation — live drums, bass, guitar, real horns, and vintage keyboards — arranged for warmth and space rather than perfectionism. The performances were captured clean and immediate, favouring emotion over studio trickery.
“Break Free” opens the album with bold, gospel‑soul energy and a deep rhythmic pulse. It’s Kat’s declaration of independence — a song about shedding self‑doubt and trusting life’s natural flow. The horns swell, the rhythm section drives forward, and her voice soars with conviction as she sings about finding strength in surrender. “When you realise self‑preservation can turn into self‑denial — that’s when it’s time to break free,” Kat explains.
“Not Pretending” channels the spirit of Stevie Wonder, fusing syncopated grooves, bright keys, and an effortless melodic flow. It radiates positivity and self‑assurance, capturing the album’s central message: honesty as empowerment. At its heart, it’s about learning that people‑pleasing doesn’t work — that real connection only comes when you show up as your true self. The interplay between the band and Kat’s supple vocal phrasing makes it one of the album’s most joyous, immediate moments.
“Better Left Unsaid” moves into bittersweet territory. Smooth, mid‑tempo soul textures unfold around a delicate vocal performance that simmers with restraint — exploring how silence can sometimes say more than confrontation. While “Humming Low” was recorded live at Konk Studios, featuring just Nick Atkinson on guitar and Kat on vocals — no overdubs, no extra production. The result is intimate and disarming, a lullaby‑like reflection on simpler times before technology dominated our daily lives. Gentle, nostalgic, and deeply human, it’s one of the record’s quiet emotional centres.
Beyond the singles, “Kings and Queens” celebrates the origins of Northern Soul culture, paying tribute to the communities, clubs, and collectors who shaped one of the UK’s most defining movements. With its driving rhythm, layered percussion, and call‑to‑dance chorus, it’s a vibrant ode to collective joy. “By Now”, one of the album’s most reflective pieces, tackles the quiet pressures placed upon women to reach conventional milestones — career, relationships, motherhood — by a certain age. Over slow‑burning harmonies and subtle jazz chords, Kat reclaims those expectations with warmth and resolve. The song encapsulates the record’s emotional heart: freedom, authenticity, and acceptance.
Finally, the title track “What Happens Now” closes the album with calm introspection and understated strength. Its open‑ended lyric asks the same question that inspired the record — what follows change, and how do we meet it with grace? A tender piano motif and swelling harmonies leave the listener suspended between reflection and renewal.