Album info

Album-Release:
2021

HRA-Release:
07.05.2021

Label: City Slang

Genre: R&B

Subgenre: Hip Hop Soul

Artist: Sophia Kennedy

Album including Album cover

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Formats & Prices

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FLAC 96 $ 14.50
  • 1Animals Will Come03:13
  • 2Orange Tic Tac03:51
  • 3I Can See You03:02
  • 4Francis03:54
  • 5Seventeen05:34
  • 6Loop03:16
  • 7I'm Looking Up04:03
  • 8Chestnut Avenue03:31
  • 9Do They Know01:47
  • 10Cat on My Tongue03:37
  • 11Brunswick00:55
  • 12Up04:28
  • 13Dragged Myself into the Sun05:19
  • Total Runtime46:30

Info for Monsters



Sophia Kennedy’s music sometimes sounds like a soundtrack to world to disintegrating, hanging on by a thread of memories, it combines the glamour and the morbid charm of tin pan alley show tunes from the 1960s or 70s and yet it fully embraces the deconstructed modernism of club music. The songs can change the atmosphere in a split second, impressively illustrated by last year’s single “Orange Tic Tac” which switched between threatening gloomy trap beats and soothing crooner melodies. Her sophomore album Monsters, to be released May 7th on City Slang, is full of plot twists, moments of prettiness dashed with paranoia. The title itself, is a self-ironic, comic-like commentary of being an artist trying to tame own creations like “monsters” gone wild but also a nod to a generally threatening tension in the world. Monsters is pop music teetering on the verge of ruin but it’s not a eulogy, it’s a Tear Down Party! 

Kennedy’s creative approach has always been unusual. Growing up in Germany after her family emigrated from Baltimore, she developed an ear for off-centred songcraft picking through her mum’s record collection: Whitney Houston and Simon & Garfunkel at first, Karen Dalton and the Velvet Underground later. With no equipment to hand, she started recording audio on a camcorder, given to her on her sixteenth's Birthday, blurring the lines between music and her other passion, film. She’d video herself singing and playing the piano, and would later process the sounds into something close to a pop song. “It was a weird way of producing music, because I didn’t know how to record myself,” she remembers. “Then, I just carried the camera with me wherever I went, documenting practically my whole life, sitting at the piano, writing Songs and making weird little soundscapes and voice-overs for my own little films. Maybe that is why my music sometimes seems to have this kind of cinematic approach.” 

Obsessed with the work of John Cassavetes and 70s horror films like Carrie, Kennedy moved to Hamburg to study film and ended up making music for theatre productions. Her involvement in the local creative community led her through the doors of the “Golden Pudel”, a techno nightclub on the grounds of a former smugglers’ prison near the Norderelbe river. Immersed in Hamburg’s dance music scene and a regular at the “Pudel”, she met Mense Reents, a musician best known for his work with the celebrated house act, Die Vögel. The pair formed a writing and production partnership, and would make Sophia’s eponymously-titled debut record together in 2017.

The album was released through DJ Koze’s label Pampa and became an overnight sensation, a surprise hit, nobody knew where she came from and where to put it musically, but people obsessed over it. The album received a glowing Pitchfork review - featuring on their ‘top electronic albums of 2017’ list - while The Cut declared it “the most exciting pop album out this year that you’ve probably never heard of.”

Forming another project called Shari Vari alongside with Helena Ratka, DJ and producer based in Hamburg, they released their debut Album „Now“ in autumn of 2019.

“Now it’s always about going one step further”. One step further is where Kennedy has taken her sound on Monsters. It’s full of hints of a former life, abstract melodic turns, instrumentation that shouldn't work, but does, wrongness that’s right. For Kennedy, though, the album’s biggest transgression is allowing the songs more liveliness and coincidences to happen in both music and textures - not correcting out of tune and wobbly instrumentation and melodies later, keeping supposed mistakes as they are. “A lot of ideas can come out when I’m writing a song: sometimes I’m looking for flow; sometimes I'm looking for ways to destroy it,” Where “Seventeen” is acid-washed Americana with creeping sub-bass, closer “Dragged Myself Into The Sun” is a full-on left hook, drones stacked like lasagna and pumped with steroids. “(“Dragged Myself…”) puts heavy, drone metal guitar over this jazz piano song - but it’s really hidden, so you don’t really know where it’s coming from.” There is pop centre pieces like “Cat On My Tongue” and “I Can See You” and the velvet-lined anthem “I’m Looking Up”, dealing with grief and death, recalling the rawest edges of Krautrock and, for Kennedy, nods to Baltimore artists Panda Bear and the strange currencies of Animal Collective.

Baltimore, Kennedy has found, plays an odd kind of role in her music, and it’s perhaps what gives it such a feeling of melodic and sonic duality. “I always go there in my mind when I'm making music, not to the city in particular, but to the conflict of growing up far away as a kid,” she says of the wistful nostalgia of “Seventeen”. “I can barely speak English properly anymore - but having that American accent in my voice when I sing, it’s the feeling that that’s the part of me that’s still there.”

Sophia Kennedy



Sophia Kennedy
Elegant, melancholic, sometimes menacing, with smoldering piano melodies, desolately whistling organs, and a jaunty jaw's harp loop; kissed by the golden Californian sun, or shrouded in gloomy, dreary fog: Sophia Kennedy is currently the most versatile composer in German pop music – not to mention the greatest singer. Her debut album "Sophia Kennedy" reveals her as a dramatic romanticist and distanced diseuse, as a deft lyricist and master of melody. In her eleven songs, she travels from doo-wop to dubstep, from classic crooning to breathless R'n'B, from Frank Sinatra to Beyoncé. Her talent for songwriting is deeply rooted in history, yet it seeks nothing but the present: both historically versed and timelessly beautiful at the same time.

Sophia Kennedy grew up in Baltimore. Upon arriving in Hamburg to study film, she instantly became a source of enchantment. On the single "Angel Lagoon", which she recorded in the autumn of 2013 with the keyboard-maestro Carsten "Erobique" Meyer, she sounded as lovely, enthralling and blasé like no other singer of the season. In the years that followed she mainly composed music for theater, feeling around for what would eventually become her own style: irony is not an important factor, it's more about appropriation and adaptation, and through effectively minimalistic means, to create space for the voice – for the singing.

Sophia Kennedy produced and recorded the album together with Mense Reents, best known for his work with Die Vögel and Die Goldenen Zitronen. Together they developed the spartan arrangements and electronic textures that determine the willfully dense sound of this album. Often, Kennedy's voice is the only instrument that pursues a harmonic development over the repetitive structures. Then she doubles and multiplies her voice and sings alongside herself in a choir. She shines with bold syncopation over a hobbling piano, as well as in the field of the melancholic lament that suggests a late Beach Boys ballad. This results in multi-dimensional, highly individual music, which easily escapes all the traps of inwardness: just as her lyrics unfold from seemingly simple wordplay to subjective confessionals without ever regressing into the euphuistic pathos of romantic self-reflection.

This is the first songwriting record to be released on Pampa Records, and yet "Sophia Kennedy" is perfectly at home on this label, which for almost a decade has been making the connection between tradition and modernity, avant-garde inventiveness and pop sensibility. One can detect different traditions and historical impressions in every track – yet you can forego all the analysis and simply enjoy the craftsmanship with which Sophia Kennedy creates an absolutely contemporary musical language from her knowledge of classic songwriting: "I want to take tradition to the limits, to where it becomes extreme," she says, yet it sounds so easy and not at all preconceived. The unheard-of refinement of this music lies in its apparent simplicity: "You just can’t be afraid," says Sophia Kennedy, "that it turns out to be pop music."

This album contains no booklet.

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