Music Review: Sophie's posthumous, self-titled final album still sounds like the future of pop

News Room
By News Room 7 Min Read

NEW YORK (AP) — Where were you when you first heard the visionary producer and musician Sophie? Was it 2013’s minimalist “Bipp,” the club banger with pitched-up vocals that hit the Internet with such peculiar ferocity as if it crash-landed from outer space?

Or was it her Grammy-nominated debut, 2018’s “Oil of Every Pearl’s Un-Insides”? Or her work on Madonna’s 2015 single “Bitch I’m Madonna”? Perhaps it was Charli XCX’s 2016 EP “Vroom Vroom,” where the popstar, forecasting a return to her club kid roots, began collaborating with the future-seeking PC Music collective, including her producer, Sophie? There’s a straight line to be drawn between that moment and the “BRAT” summer that took over 2024; in some ways Charli, like most pop savants, still seeks to enliven their work with even a fraction of Sophie’s talents.

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