Release date: 6/26/2026
2xCD and digital.
After Aktor and Quietism last year, the Scotsman is in top form, churning out albums that are stunning in their intelligence and pop refinement. If Mannequin is so good, it's for three main reasons. The first is that Momus has returned from his experiments that saw him playing around with AI or composing K-pop songs. We welcome with delight his return to the basics of a pure and perfect pop characterised by a certain economy of means, a DIY ethos — a synth-pop hodgepodge that suits him perfectly. Like Lawrence of Felt or Daniel Treacy of the TVPs (late period), Momus is never better than when he displays a certain sonic modesty that gives his cobbled-together, rickety songs the allure of miniature jewels. Paradoxically, Mannequin is dark and resolutely despairing, but also an exercise in escape and divination. The miracle lies in this ability to transcend torment through naiveté, to overcome aggression through song, to annihilate evil through beauty. It could be achieved through excessive intellectualisation, but that's not the case here. A three-year-old would realize that Momus redeems the ills of our time by pushing his songs into and against the world, amidst general indifference. Listening to him gives a thrill of pleasure and relief, the feeling that you've made your day and that everything could be better. Mannequin has the grace of the musicians who played piano on the deck of the Titanic. - Benjamin Berton, Sun Burns Out
Disc 1 (Mannequin): 4x4, Lost in Love, The Claw Republic, Mannequin, Neversay, Hatefulness, Sexual Sickness, Vastly Ghastly Grizzly, Ballyshannon, The Octopus, Afterlife, Decency, The Sea The Sea, Mr Sliding Sideways, The Old Apostasy
The second CD is a collection of Momus translations and reworkings of songs by Michel Polnareff, commissioned by Robert Dye.
Disc 2 (Polnaquin): Sensitive Soul, Rosy, Intemporal, You Can't Hear Me, Simple Melody, My Regrets, Kama Sutra, Chateau of Gray, Goodbye Marylou, Love Me Please Love Me, Tam Tam, The Doll Who Says No, Letter to France, Everybody's Going to Paradise
$12.00
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Release date: February 21, 2025 (Original release date on Home Normal was April 29, 2016) The piano sketches of M. Ostermeier's fourth album are more...
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Darla Records is proud to offer the first digital and CD reissue of M.I.A.'s fourth and final record After the Fact, originally released on Flipside Records in early...