Wendy Bevan opens Alone With The Unknown with Innocence; a cinematic single produced by Nick Rhodes setting the tone through noir atmosphere, brass-led tension, tremolo guitar, and an intimate, hypnotic vocal.

Due October 2, 2026, the album pulls from film noir, old Hollywood glamour, Sicilian mystery, Vertigo, and La Dolce Vita. Love, desire, myth, and memory with the lights turned low.
Produced with Rhodes following their previous Astronomia collaboration, Alone With The Unknown builds on Bevan’s reputation for theatrical, atmospheric, emotionally charged work while sharpening her identity as a solo artist.
Ahead of her BST Hyde Park appearance supporting Duran Duran and Scissor Sisters, Wendy Bevan discusses Innocence, cinematic tension, vulnerability, visual storytelling, working with Nick Rhodes, and building the world of Alone With The Unknown.
I just love elegance and old fashioned glamour and what it stands for, is such a huge part of a visual language that we all recognise and understand in classic cinema still, to this day.

Q1. Innocence opens the world of Alone With The Unknown. What made this the right first glimpse into the album?
Innocence asks the listener to surrender to the power of the passions. Its one of my favourite tracks on the record so it felt like the right introduction to Alone With The Unknown; it captures so much of what I want this album to represent.
Built around rich sonic textures, Innocence carries a shadowy cinematic atmosphere with a distinct film noir edge. It pulls you into a mysterious world, thats evolving around you, both intimate and urgent, where emotion becomes the driving force of the story.
The vocal introduces a powerful central character whose desires and vulnerabilities set the tone for everything that follows.
Q2. The track moves through love, danger, desire, and surrender. What did you want to explore about vulnerability inside human connection?
There is a balance between vulnerability and surrender, and the risk that comes with the fragility of any meaningful human connection. I wanted to explore that tension within the song that exists alongside desire, intensity, and trust.
Exploring this lyrically and elevating this feeling melodically was something I intended to illuminate because everyone of us can relate to it and thats an important part of songwriting for me. When a song is honest about vulnerability, it has the power to resonate on a much deeper level with your audience.

Q3. You describe Innocence as suspended between dream and memory. How did that emotional space shape the writing?
When I write, I’m often imagining a character, a set of circumstances, or a narrative, but the process usually begins with a feeling. It might be a line that won’t leave my head after an experience, or an emotion that continues to linger long after the moment has passed. In many ways, my songs can feel like premonitions lyrical portals into their own emotional universes.
A lot of my work is driven by instinct and emotional connection, and that space between dream and memory is often where those feelings live. I’m constantly searching for the ineffable, an emotion or sensation that’s difficult to put into words but feels deeply familiar. I’m always trying to translate a feeling into words, sounds, and melodies in a way that allows other people to experience it as deeply as I do.
Q4. Film noir, European cinema, and old Hollywood glamour all sit inside the song’s visual language. What draws you to that world?
I’m drawn to worlds that offer an escape from reality, places that are sensual, where the light is golden, romantic, mysterious, and heightened. Film noir, European cinema, and old Hollywood all embody that for me.
I just love elegance and old fashioned glamour and what it stands for, is such a huge part of a visual language that we all recognise and understand in classic cinema still, to this day.
There’s something so timeless, yet untouchable about it and what we instantly recognise in the imagery: the mystery, the desire, the tension between characters, the layered subplots, and the sense that there’s always something hidden beneath the surface. I’m endlessly fascinated by that world.

Q5. The video carries echoes of Vertigo, La Dolce Vita, and Sicilian mystery. How did the island setting deepen the story?
There’s a place where I can push away the rest of the world. It’s a place where I can think and explore, it’s a small paradise thats a secret and hidden from the crowds, untouched by time, away from all the noise of modern reality.
The rugged, volcanic landscape, the light, and its powerful silence, drenched in dusty golden light, felt like the perfect setting to bring together the atmosphere to match the old Hollywood glamour, and dreamlike mystery that sit at the heart of the song, with an added bit of dark humour that makes it truly, film noir.
Visually there are echoes of Vertigo, La Dolce Vita, and the surreal emotional landscapes of Maya Deren’s films in the way the story unfolds where memory, desire, and reality begin to blur into one another. There’s also something deeply romantic about the idea of la dolce vita—not just glamour, but the pursuit of beauty, mystery, and fleeting moments of transcendence.
I always think it’s important that a video enhances a song and does not detract from the music. So the island became much more than a location, it became a character within the story, a poetry of place.
Q6. FM PRO TECH Q: Working with Nick Rhodes, what production choices helped create the track’s cinematic tension without losing vocal intimacy?
There’s a sensuality in the sway of the chords that became central to the song. The brass section creates tension and yearning, while the tremolo guitar and bass adds movement and atmosphere. We wanted it to feel timeless- with a simmering and shimmering feel, something you’d discover on a worn vinyl record.
One of the key production choices was allowing the vocal and brass to breathe together. The swells of the vocal mirror the swells of the brass, which adds to the drama and emotional intensity without losing intimacy. The understated drama of the verses leading to the yearning, crescendos of the choruses struck a strangely beautiful balance.
The orchestral arrangement juxtaposed with the twangy guitar, immediately started to sound cinematic. Once we begin to imagine the visuals for a piece of music, we know we were managing to capture something special. We wanted the track to feel cinematic and expansive, but with the vocal remaining close enough to feel like a confession.

Q7. You previously collaborated with Nick on Astronomia. What felt different about entering this new solo album world together?
Nick and I actually began working on this album before the pandemic. In 2020, we decided to put the project on hold because, like many people, we were uncertain about how the future would unfold. When we returned to it, our creative dynamic had evolved. Nick stepped into the role of Producer, nurturing and shaping the world of the album, which helped me focus on developing my voice and identity as a solo artist.
The journey became less about two individual artistic voices meeting in the middle and more about creating a singular world together one where Nick could support and elevate my vision as a producer, while helping shape the sound of Alone With The Unknown into what it has become.
Q8. Alone With The Unknown explores love, longing, myth, memory, and unseen forces. What connects those ideas across the record?
For me, Alone With The Unknown is about existing within uncertainty. It’s about recognising that we’re part of something much bigger than ourselves, even if we can’t fully understand it. On one level, it’s a deeply personal record, but on another, it’s about universal human experiences: searching for meaning, connection, and beauty in a world that often remains mysterious.
That tension between the intimate and the infinite is what ties the album together, with lyrics, melody and shimmering chords. It’s an exploration of humanity, fragility, and the unseen forces that shape our lives, whether we recognise them or not.

Q9. You are playing BST Hyde Park supporting Duran Duran and Scissor Sisters. How does this new material shift when placed on a stage that scale?
My hope is that when these new songs are performed on stage, they resonate with people just as deeply as they do in more intimate moments when someone is listening alone through headphones, on the train, at work, or simply moving through their everyday life. I want them to retain that intimacy.
The challenge and excitement, is finding a way to expand the world of the songs without losing their emotional core. Performing at BST Hyde Park brings an incredible sense of achievement, but I want the audience to still feel invited into the world of the record, a world that accepts them. I want people to find their own stories in the songs, and to feel connected to the themes that run throughout the album.
Q10. FM PRO TECH Q: When building the sonic identity of Alone With The Unknown, how did you balance atmosphere, melody, vocal character, and visual mood into one coherent world?
I think that’s really the art of production. Building a record is about creating a universe one where atmosphere, melody, vocal character, lyrical intention, and visual identity all serve the same narrative. For me, a song begins as something very small: an idea, a feeling, a line, a chord progression, or a melody.
From there it evolves into a track, and eventually into something that’s performed and experienced by an audience. Production is the foundation that allows all of those elements to connect and grow into a coherent world. The title itself, Alone With The Unknown, became a framework for everything else.
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