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Various images of Sophie have emerged in the years since her death: red hair, red lipstick, photos of her in a puffer jacket in a recording studio, smoking, walking a donkey, bathing in neon lights on stage. In life, however, she mostly preferred to stay out of the picture. She produced more songs than she released herself, and while she appeared in her own music videos, she also regularly released album covers featuring AI-generated images of strange slides and coils.
The final three tracks on Sophie might sound most familiar to those most familiar with her most popular collaborations, like “1, 2, 3 Dayz Up” with Petras. The sweet, transcendent “Always and Forever” is a collaboration with Diamond of PC Music fame. Cecile Believe, who often writes and performs with Sophie and provided vocals on tracks like “Immaterial” from Un-Insides by Oil of Every Pearl, returns to helm a slower version of “My Forever”—a song previously featured on Sophie’s incredible “Heav3n Suspended” livestream from 2020—with a touching message about time and love. The album’s closing track, “Love Me Off Earth,” sung by Doss and co-written with Thora Siemsen and M Zavos-Costales, is one of the most powerful of the lot. “What is it worth to love me off earth?” Doss croons on the hyper-pop track, filled with echoing synths, before her voice becomes an instrument in Sophie’s hands. (“My songwriting was initially driven by personal grief, but it took on a new meaning after her passing,” Siemsen tells me over email. “I don’t think it’s dark musically, though. It feels cathartic to dance to.”)
Sophie’s pop and experimental leanings battle it out on the new album as she tracks through trap, spoken word poetry, dirty hard-core beats and more straight-ahead, glittery pop melodies with sparkling production. Dense lyrics about transhumanism and the nature of the universe set against ethereal synths echo across several tracks, including the Huxtable collaboration “Plunging Asymptote” and the seven-minute “The Dome’s Protection” with Kraviz. Big Sister sings about “transparent infinity” and “false mythology” on the steamy standout “Do U Wanna Be Alive?”, her attitude expertly matched by Sophie’s mechanical, sardonic production. Sophie’s crunchy club bangers dominate the album’s second half. Tracks like the hard-core “Elegance,” featuring Popstar, move from beat to beat; or the repetitive, rhythmic “Berlin Nightmare” with Sophie’s partner, Evita Manji. The dramatic melodies of “One More Time” are broken up by Bourelly’s collaboration “Exhilarate,” with Bourelly’s vocals gliding over a slightly off-beat and somewhat erratic rhythm.
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