Together they encapsulate an artist who moves effortlessly between worlds—folk, electronic, jazz, and psychedelia—while delivering lyrics that feel like messages carried on the wind. | Influence | Manifestation in Cadey’s Work | |-----------|--------------------------------| | 1970s Folk‑Rock (Joni Mitchell, Neil Young) | Story‑driven lyricism, acoustic fingerpicking, open‑tuned guitars. | | Trip‑Hop & Downtempo (Massive Attack, Portishead) | Lo‑fi beats, vinyl‑crackle textures, smoky vocal reverbs. | | Jazz Fusion (Herbie Hancock, Miles Davis’s electric period) | Harmonic adventurousness, modal improvisation, use of electric piano and synth‑flutes. | | Contemporary Indie‑Electronic (Sylvan Esso, Arca) | Glitch‑infused production, glitchy vocal chops, non‑linear song structures. | | Native Pacific Northwest Sounds (Molly Nilsson, The Microphones) | Atmospheric field recordings (rain, forest, distant train whistles) woven into tracks. |
1. Who Is Cadey Mercury Bree? Cadey Mercury Bree (born Cassandra “Cadey” Bellamy on March 12 1994, Portland, Oregon) is an emerging singer‑songwriter, multi‑instrumentalist, and producer who has quickly become a cult favourite in the global indie‑alternative scene. Her moniker— Cadey Mercury Bree —is a three‑part homage: cadey mercury bree
| Part | Meaning | |------|----------| | | A playful truncation of Cassandra , but also a nod to “caddy” (a carrier of tools), reflecting her role as a conduit for sonic tools. | | Mercury | The planet and the element, symbolising fluidity, quicksilver change, and the messenger god’s ability to traverse realms—mirroring her genre‑bending music. | | Bree | A whisper of wind, a “bree” as in a light gust that carries melodies across distance, and a personal family nickname given by her grandmother. | Together they encapsulate an artist who moves effortlessly
Cadey’s sound can be described as Her songs often start in an intimate acoustic space, then dissolve into layered synth‑scapes, only to re‑coalesce in a final, cathartic chorus that feels both grounded and otherworldly. 3. Biography in Three Acts Act I – Roots & Reveries (1994‑2015) Raised in a bohemian household, Cadey grew up listening to her mother’s vinyl collection (Bob Dylan, Nina Simone) while her father tinkered with analog synth modules. By age 12 she was already building a makeshift studio in her parents’ garage, recording backyard jam sessions on a battered Tascam 424. She performed her first open‑mic set at Portland’s Space Room at 15, earning a reputation for “haunting melodies that felt older than her years.” Act II – The Mercury Phase (2016‑2021) After a brief stint at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago (majoring in sound art), Cadey returned to the Pacific Northwest, where she adopted the name Mercury as a symbol of artistic elasticity. She self‑released two EPs— QuickSilver (2017) and Alchemical Nights (2019)—both of which were streamed over 300,000 times combined on Bandcamp. During this period she collaborated with local visual artists, creating immersive “sound‑and‑light” installations that were featured at the Portland Art Museum’s “Synesthetic” exhibition. Act III – Bree‑Storm (2022‑Present) The addition of “Bree” in 2022 signalled a new creative direction: wind‑driven, kinetic compositions inspired by her travels across the American West. In 2023 she released her debut full‑length album, Crescent Currents , on the indie label Starlit Harbor . The record debuted at #12 on Billboard’s Emerging Artists chart and earned critical praise from Pitchfork (“A breath of fresh air in a genre often stuck in the past”) and The Guardian (“Cadey Mercury Bree crafts songs that feel like secret messages whispered through the pines”). The lead single, “Glass Harbor” , amassed over 12 million streams on Spotify and was featured in the soundtrack of the Netflix series “Northbound” . 4. Discography (Highlights) | Year | Title | Format | Notable Tracks | Themes | |------|-------|--------|----------------|--------| | 2017 | QuickSilver EP | Digital/ Vinyl | “Silver Tongue”, “Mercurial Pulse” | Transience, self‑discovery | | 2019 | Alchemical Nights EP | Cassette/Streaming | “Starlight Distillation”, “Night‑Glass” | Transformation, mysticism | | 2023 | Crescent Currents (LP) | CD/ Vinyl/ Streaming | “Glass Harbor”, “Bree‑Line”, “Solar Tide” | Migration, nature, human connection | | 2025 | Wind‑Shift (Live in the Gorge) (Live Album) | Limited‑edition LP | “Bree‑Line (Live)”, “Canyon Echoes” | Live improvisation, ambient field recordings | | | Jazz Fusion (Herbie Hancock, Miles Davis’s


