SOCCER MOMMY - color theory VINYL (LTD. ED. GREY, BLUE OR YELLOW - RANDOMLY SELECTED)
Regular price
£18.99
Sale
LIMITED EDITION GREY, BLUE OR YELLOW VINYL (RANDOMLY SELECTED)
Release Date: 28th February 2020
Soccer Mommy, aka American singer-songwriter Sophie Allison, is back with the follow-up to her break-out debut proper, 2018's Clean. At 22, Allison is still so young, yet has already amassed years of experience both musically and personally, and on color theory she lays it all bare like never before. Those honest lyrics are soundtracked by her signature mix of nostalgic 90's pop-rock, bedroom-rock, indie-pop and folk-rock. She's just getting better and better!
For Fans Of/You May Also Like: Ellis, Beach Bunny, Jay Som, Tomberlin
"For Sophie Allison, aka Soccer Mommy, color theory is a distillation of hard-won catharsis. The album confronts the ongoing mental health and familial trials that have plagued the 22-year-old artist since pre-pubescence, presenting listeners with an uncompromisingly honest self-portrait, and reminding us exactly why her critically-acclaimed debut, 2018’s Clean, made her a hero to many. Wise beyond her years, Allison is a songwriter capable of capturing the fleeting moments of bliss that make an embattled existence temporarily beautiful. With color theory, Allison’s fraught past becomes a lens through which we might begin to understand what it means to be resilient. color theory investigates a traumatic past in exacting detail; in doing so, Allison finds inroads for healing through self-acceptance, and occasionally, humor. (“I’m the princess of screwing up!” she declares at one point.) This isn’t a quest to uncover some long-since forgotten happiness so much as it is an effort to stare-down the turmoil of adolescence that can haunt a person well into adulthood. Allison is a gifted storyteller, one who is able to take personal experience and project it to universal scale. On color theory, she beckons in outsiders, rejects, and anyone who has ever felt desperately alone in this world, lending them a place to unburden themselves and be momentarily free."