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

NEW YORK (AP) — Where were you when you first heard the visionary producer and musician Sophie? Was it 2013's minimalist “B¾±±è±è,†the club banger with pitched-up vocals that hit the Internet with such peculiar ferocity as if it crash-landed from outer
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This image released by Future Classic shows a self-titled release "Sophie." (Future Classic via AP)

NEW YORK (AP) — Where were you when you first heard the visionary producer and musician Sophie? Was it 2013's minimalist 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 2015 single “Bitch I’m Madonna"? Perhaps it was 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 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.

Perhaps Sophie was your introduction to hyperpop, a dot-com neologism used as a catchall for avant-garde electronic music with digital aesthetics? Whatever the moment, the effects are always the same: Hearing Sophie's big, bright songs feels like looking into the future. With each project, her work has always prophesied where pop music is headed. And on her final, posthumous album — lovingly curated by her brother and studio engineer Benny Long — she's still practicing prescience.

Three years ago, Sophie slipped and fell from the balcony of an apartment where she was staying in Athens. In a statement, her U.K. label Transgressive said she was simply trying to get a better view of a full moon. She was 34.

Before her death, she had nearly completed a new album — this album, even selecting the tracklist — and so Long chose to release it.

“Sophie,†the album, is full of shimmery, sugar-rush hyperpop, like the ebullient “Why Lies,†with BC Kingdom and LIZ, to the warp speed, cracking production of “Elegance†featuring Popstar, that increases its BPM with each dizzying passing second — and then slows, moving with incredible unpredictability. There are radio-ready pop hits here, too: like the “Exhilarate†with Bibi Bourelly, the liquid trap “RAWWWWWW" with Jozzy.

And there's a cohesive darkness, from the breathy “Intro (The Full Horror)†and “The Dome's Protection†featuring Nina Kraviz to the industrial fever dream “Berlin Nightmare†with Evita Manji. At each corner, there is a satiating surprise — percussion punched up, a distorted vocal with unusual intensity, whatever metallic techno-trance-dance is happening on “Gallop,†also with Manji, punctuated with asymmetrical, inorganic sounds.

It's likely that the love song “Always and Forever,†will be a source of conversation around the album; it features one of Sophie's earliest collaborators, Hannah Diamond, and, following Sophie's death, plays out like a tribute to her. Notably, it's a softer moment on the album packed with a kind of intentional maximalism, mirroring its emotionality.

The challenge with posthumous releases — particularly those meticulously crafted by destiny-seeking innovators, gone much too soon and much too young — is grappling with the finality of the release. But across 16-tracks, Sophie's “Sophie†still sounds like the future of pop music; there is nothing past tense here.

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Maria Sherman, The Associated Press