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Daughter - Stereo Mind Game (Eco Colour Vinyl)
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Elena
Tonra
isn’t
a
keen
swimmer,
but
oceans
pervade
Stereo
Mind
Game.
It’s
a
matter
of
distance.
Daughter’s
third
record,
the
band’s
first
studio
album
for
seven
years,
grapples
with
what
it
means
to
be
separated,
from
loved
ones
and
too
from
yourself.
“Oh
it
will
likely
kill
me
/
That
I
must
live
/
Without
you
/
Because
I
can’t
swim,”
Tonra
sings,
whisper-like,
on
“Isolation”.
It’s
a
classic
Daughter
song
that
basks
elegantly
in
deepest
despair.
Yet
here
there’s
a
sense
of
something
beyond
despair
too.
“I’ll
compose
myself
/
I’ll
get
over
it,”
Tonra
continues.
On
Stereo
Mind
Game,
Daughter
tend
to
sorrow
by
fixing
it
in
time.
Doing
so
makes
it
more
real,
like
the
flower
–
dried,
pressed
and
remembered
–
on
the
album’s
cover.
Daughter
–
the
trio
comprising
Tonra,
Igor
Haefeli
and
Remi
Aguilella
–
formed
in
2010.
After
releasing
two
studio
albums,
If
You
Leave
(2013)
and
Not
to
Disappear
(2016),
and
the
video
game
soundtrack
Music
From
Before
the
Storm
(2017),
they
chose
to
take
some
time
off.
But
not
before
jamming
together
in
Los
Angeles,
in
between
a
support
tour
with
The
National
and
their
first
headline
shows
in
South
America.
It
was
here
that
a
new
album
started
to
germinate.
Over
the
next
couple
of
years
–
during
which
they
worked
on
their
own
projects,
including
Tonra’s
solo
record
as
Ex:Re
–
Daughter
met
occasionally
to
write
together
in
studios
in
London,
Portland
and
in
San
Diego,
where
Haefeli
lived
for
six
months
in
2019.
The
record’s
central
romantic
figure
is
someone
Tonra
met
out
there
when
she
visited
from
London.
They
shared
a
significant
connection,
but
she
knew
the
Atlantic
lay
between
them.
It’s
this
that
she
sings
about
on
“Be
On
Your
Way”,
a
longing
but
resilient
song
about
an
enduring
connection
that
is
also
undefinable.
Where
previous
Daughter
songs
mourned
old
relationships,
here
Tonra
is
accepting
of
whatever
the
future
brings.
“A
friend
said
to
me
recently:
just
because
something
ends,
doesn’t
mean
that
it
wasn’t
real,”
she
says.
Haefeli
likens
the
revelation
to
the
pressed
flower
image:
“It’s
still
there.
It
still
exists.
It
grew
that
spring.”
Daughter
began
recording
the
album’s
twelve
songs
in
earnest
in
2021.
Haefeli,
who
lives
in
Bristol,
met
with
Tonra
at
Middle
Farm
Studios
in
Devon.
Aguilella,
who
is
based
in
Portland,
Oregon,
recorded
his
drum
parts
in
Bocce
Studio
in
Vancouver,
Washington.
Haefeli
produced
a
number
of
the
songs,
while
Tonra
produced
“Junkmail”.
They
co-produced
the
rest.
The
longing
to
close
physical
distances
–
a
feeling
that
only
grew
during
the
pandemic
–
has
seeped
into
many
of
these
tracks.
On
“Wish
I
Could
Cross
the
Sea”
we
hear
voice
notes
from
Tonra’s
young
niece
and
nephew,
who
live
in
Italy.
“(Missed
Calls)”
features
another
voice
note,
in
which
a
friend
describes
a
dream.
Fed
through
some
modular
effects,
it
becomes
glitchy,
and
haunting.
These
messages,
attempts
at
connection
from
loved
ones
you’re
unable
to
see,
“can
pull
you
out
of
the
well”,
Tonra
says
–
but
only
if
you
pick
up
the
phone.
When
you
let
others
in,
beauty
can
arise.
Deep
feeling
comes
from
the
bows
of
the
12
Ensemble,
the
London-based
string
orchestra,
who
play
on
many
of
the
album’s
tracks.
Arranged
by
Haefeli
and
Tonra,
and
orchestrated
by
Josephine
Stephenson,
their
parts
were
–
fittingly
–
recorded
at
The
Pool,
a
space
in
Bermondsey,
south
London,
which
is
a
former
swimming
spot.
A
brass
quartet
also
brings
a
new
sonic
warmth
to
“Neptune”
and
“To
Rage”.
And
for
the
first
time,
Tonra’s
is
not
a
lone
voice.
On
“Dandelion”,
which
glistens
with
Haefeli’s
chime-like
guitars
and
Aguilella’s
rousing
drums,
Tonra
plays
call
and
response
with
herself.
Haefeli
leads
some
vocal
lines
on
the
exhilarating
“Future
Lover”,
and
on
“Neptune”,
a
choir
appears.
These
vocalists
are
the
string
players
of
the
12
Ensemble.
“It’s
one
of
my
favourite
moments
of
the
record,”
Tonra
says,
“when
suddenly,
the
crowd
joins.
It’s
a
very
lonely
song.
But
even
when
I’ve
felt
the
most
alone,
arms
have
reached
out
to
me.”
In
order
to
maintain
relationships
with
others,
we
must
first
make
peace
with
ourselves.
“Party”
recounts
a
significant
moment:
the
night
that
made
Tonra
realise
she
wanted
to
give
up
alcohol.
It’s
a
topic
she
has
written
about
before,
but
she
needed
distance
to
see
it
clearly.
Haefeli
borrows
her
image:
“This
time
you
had
climbed
out
of
the
well,”
he
says,
“and
were
looking
back
down.”
It’s
the
song
she’s
most
proud
of,
and
the
one
that
lends
its
lyrics
to
the
album
title
(“Some
stereo
mind
game
I
play
with
myself”),
which
refers
to
the
conflicting
voices
we
all
have
in
our
heads.
While
Daughter’s
previous
work
found
power
in
emotional
honesty,
Stereo
Mind
Game
welcomes
opposing
feelings.
“It’s
about
not
working
in
absolutes,”
Haefeli
says.
After
more
than
a
decade
spent
depicting
the
darkest
emotions,
Daughter
have
made
their
most
optimistic
record
yet.
Tracklisting:
Intro
Be
On
Your
Way
Party
Dandelion
Neptune
Swim
Back
Junkmail
Future
Lover
(Missed
Calls)
Isolation
To
Rage
Wish
I
Could
Cross
The
Sea
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