
LP - Changing Faces, 2022
The first album by Kuill was written about a physical and philosophical transformation. It's all about identity and how we can use all of our experiences good and bad to shape who we become. It deals with the pressures of being involved in the music industry and how that can effect your confidence and mentality leading to substance abuse and self doubt. It's also a celebration of someone from a working class background achieving seemingly impossible dreams.
Peaking at No 41 on the Official Charts Albums Downloads.
#2 in the iTunes Singer/Songwriter Albums Chart
#15 in the iTunes Overall Albums Chart

LP - Fragile Creatures, 2024
Packed with rich emotional storytelling, KUILL delivers a substantial fifteen tracks which maintains an energetic uplifting feel throughout. On the album, KUILL shares: “It explores the delicate and fragile nature of human beings, big and small. Kuill believes we are all just one terrible day away from our delicate fragility being exposed and shattered. Some people have the energy and self control on a daily basis to stay clear of that path entirely. These are brave and powerful people, who can take suffering and pain in large doses yet somehow preserve their fragility.” This album also explores the journey into parenthood, and how suddenly you are no longer responsible for just yourself, you have to protect tiny hands and feet.
Peaking at No 31 on the Official Charts Album Downloads.
#1 in the iTunes POP Albums Chart
#3 in the iTunes Overall Albums Chart

EP - The Green Time Machine, 2025
Once you've experienced a world outside of the box, it becomes very difficult to be content with a life inside the box. - You search and crave the highs, and sometimes venture so far away from your box that you stop being you.
The story of The Green Time Machine focusses on the desire for fulfilment and the delicate balance between exploration and staying true to who you are. It also explores the darker side of that journey and how substance abuse, anxiety and perspective can mentally leave us wandering around haunted houses. The EP uses the themes of fairytales and fables to better articulate the ideas of this concept.
If you could travel to the past and fix mistakes you have ever made, would you? I mean every wrong word you have said to someone else, friendships or relationships that ended badly, a scenario that didn't go the way you wanted it to. Could you, and should you change it? Or do these things that happen shape who we become and help you create the version of yourself that you were always meant to be?